
Contents
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First Generation Fundamentalist Publishing First Generation Fundamentalist Publishing
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Post-War Networks Post-War Networks
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West African Missions West African Missions
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Neo-Fundamentalism Neo-Fundamentalism
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Suggested Reading Suggested Reading
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References References
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12 Fundamentalist Magazine Publishing
Get accessAmber Thomas Reynolds has taught courses in church history and modern American history at Wheaton College, Illinois, as both an adjunct and as Visiting Assistant Professor. Her research and writing focus on twentieth-century evangelicalism, including its expression in popular periodicals and intersections with post-Second World War American culture. She is currently working on a book exploring the cultural history of the evangelical belief that God has a plan for one’s life.
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Published:20 November 2023
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Abstract
This chapter surveys three generations of fundamentalist magazine publishing in the twentieth century: the pre-war era, the post-war era, and the neo-fundamentalist era of the 1980s. By analysing representative titles, it shows how magazine editors capitalized upon the ‘fundamentalist’ name but prevented the movement from having a single voice. It situates the periodicals within their wider publishing networks and trends, and it shows magazine editors’ awareness of their competition. Ultimately, few periodicals stood the test of time like Moody Monthly or Sword of the Lord without adaptations. Outside of American publications, it surveys organs for British fundamentalists, missionaries in China, and the African Challenge, a popular monthly founded by Sudan Interior Mission agents in Nigeria, which became the continent’s leading Christian periodical. The chapter concludes with a discussion of Britain’s Banner of Truth magazine, whose Puritan-inspired editor demonstrated that not all evangelicals who supported biblical inerrancy embraced American-style fundamentalism.
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