Synopses & Reviews
This volume examines the persuasive ministry of the Reverend Dr. Harry Emerson Fosdick, analyzing his delivery, style, invention, and persuasion strategies. It is the first book to review Fosdick's oratory and explain his process of creating persuasive, effective sermons. It combines speech texts and an extensive bibliography with a critical interpretation of his famous homilies and addresses and it brings together in one concise text a definitive alphabetical calendar of speeches, a chronology of sermons keyed to his numerous books, and a detailed bibliography of works by and about Fosdick. This fascinating study provides a valuable new research tool in the study of rhetoric.
From Puritan times to the present, religious rhetoric has played an important role in the political and social life of the United States and has occasionally revealed the highest and lowest attainments of Americans. This volume, the second in a series of book-length studies on great American orators, examines the persuasive ministry of the Reverend Dr. Harry Emerson Fosdick and analyzes his delivery, style, invention, and persuasive strategies. It is the first book to review Fosdick's oratory and explain his process of creating persuasive, effective sermons. It combines speech texts and an extensive bibliography with a critical interpretation of his famous homilies and addresses and it brings together in one concise text a definitive alphabetical calendar of speeches, a chronology of sermons keyed to his numerous books, and a detailed bibliography of works by and about Fosdick. Of special note is the inclusion of the famous Shall the Fundamentalists Win? sermon, with never-before-published additions and subtractions, and the ad lib additions and deletions from speech text and recordings of the Handling Life's Second-Bests sermon.
This fascinating study provides a valuable new research tool in the study of rhetoric.
Review
. . . Ryan's work shows long toil in these sources. The book is a stimulus to further research on this fascinating man whom one contemporary called a "well-scrubbed butcher boy."The Journal of Religion
Review
Halford Ryan is professor of public speaking at Washington and Lee University in Virginia. This volume, which follows the plan of other volumes in the series, focuses on the orator Harry Emerson Fosdick (1879-1969), one of the outstanding preachers in the history of the United States, especially on his status as a rhetorician, a practitioner of the art of persuasive discourse. Part I is a critical analysis of Fosdick and his speeches. Part II contains: 1) five of his sermons or speeches; 2) a calendar of this sermons; 3) a calendar of his secular addresses; 4) a bibliography of manuscript collections, audio and video collections, books, articles, and other pieces by Fosdick; and books, articles, and dissertations about him.Theology Digest
Synopsis
From Puritan times to the present, religious rhetoric has played an important role in the political and social life of the United States and has occasionally revealed the highest and lowest attainments of Americans. This volume, the second in a series of book-length studies on great American orators, examines the persuasive ministry of the Reverend Dr. Harry Emerson Fosdick and analyzes his delivery, style, invention, and persuasive strategies. It is the first book to review Fosdick's oratory and explain his process of creating persuasive, effective sermons. It combines speech texts and an extensive bibliography with a critical interpretation of his famous homilies and addresses and it brings together in one concise text a definitive alphabetical calendar of speeches, a chronology of sermons keyed to his numerous books, and a detailed bibliography of works by and about Fosdick. Of special note is the inclusion of the famous "Shall the Fundamentalists Win?" sermon, with never-before-published additions and subtractions, and the ad lib additions and deletions from speech text and recordings of the "Handling Life's Second-Bests" sermon. This fascinating study provides a valuable new research tool in the study of rhetoric.
About the Author
HALFORD R. RYAN is Professor of Public Speaking at Washington and Lee University, Virginia.
Table of Contents
Foreword by Bernard K. Duffy
A Preacher Preaching
Fosdick vs. the Fundamentalists
Quo Vadis: God of War or Peace?
Reforming the Reform: Going Beyond Modernism
Preaching at Riverside
Collected Sermons and Speeches
Chronology of Speeches
Bibliography
Index