  Volume 8, Issue 4
July/Aug, 2002 |
Displaying 1 - 20 of 23 articles.
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A Conversation on Books About Islam and the Middle East After September 11, books about Islam and the Middle East shot to the top of the bestseller charts. American readers sought to learn more about a religion that had inspired such zealotry, however misguided, and about a portion of the world that erupts in violence almost daily. Several months later, Books & Culture editor John Wilson and regular contributor Philip Yancey found themselves on a panel discussing a sampling of books that shed light on these issues. Philip Yancey and John Wilson
After Experience? William James and consumer religion Christopher Shannon
It Takes Three to Tango Neither syntax nor semantics maps the full richness of everyday speech. John H. McWhorter
Letters
Life Among the Cyber-Amish Computer Control, Part 2 Alan Jacobs
Looking Up from the Navel Three novels that get out and about Betty Smartt Carter
Modern and Christian How to think with the mind of Christ. David S. Dockery
Our Posthuman Future A conversation with Francis Fukuyama Michael Cromartie
Pastel Covers, Real People What I learned from reading 34 Christian novels Andy Crouch
People as Property Face to face with slavery Richard Lischer
Reading, Writing, and Charity A theology of reading. Mark Walhout
Red, White, and Gray Andrew Jackson and Indian removal Kenneth Moore Startup
Should the Lord Tarry The future of Christianity Philip Jenkins
Smoke Signals on Film Indians in the Movies Crystal Downing
Stranger in a Strange Land Mixedblood Trickster John Wilson
The Bird Who Married a Blue Light A story. Diane Glancy
The Decline That Wasn't A widely cited 1987 study by James Davison Hunter claimed that students at evangelical colleges were becoming increasingly secularized and abandoning their orthodox faith commitments—and predicted that this trend would continue. A new study reviews the ev James M. Penning and Corwin E. Smidt
The Peaceable Kingdom? Guns and the English Clayton E. Cramer
The Persistence of Indians: In Search of Native America In search of Native America by Kenneth Moore Startup
The Way It Was Before Stephen Carter's first novel offers a compelling mystery Elizabeth Fox-Genovese
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