Crabgrass Catholicism: How Suburbanization Transformed Faith and Politics in Postwar America
Crabgrass Catholicism: How Suburbanization Transformed Faith and Politics in Postwar America
by Stephen M. Koeth, CSC
University of Chicago Press, 2025 Cloth: 978-0-226-82996-8 | Paper: 978-0-226-84220-2 | eISBN: 978-0-226-84219-6 Library of Congress Classification BX1407.S8K64 2025 Dewey Decimal Classification 282.7472109045
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC | REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
ABOUT THIS BOOK
How suburbanization was a crucial catalyst for reforms in the Catholic Church.
The 1960s in America were a time of revolt against the stifling conformism embodied in the sprawling, uniform suburbs of the 1950s. Typically, the reforms of the Catholic Church’s Second Vatican Council, which aimed to make the Church more modern and accessible, are seen as one result of that broader cultural liberalization. Yet in Crabgrass Catholicism, Stephen M. Koeth demonstrates that the liberalization of the Church was instead the product of the mass suburbanization that began some fifteen years earlier. Koeth argues that postwar suburbanization revolutionized the Catholic parish, the relationship between clergy and laity, conceptions of parochial education, and Catholic participation in US politics, and thereby was a significant factor in the religious disaffiliation that only accelerated in subsequent decades.
A novel exploration of the role of Catholics in postwar suburbanization, Crabgrass Catholicism will be of particular interest to urban historians, scholars of American Catholicism and religious studies, and Catholic clergy and laity.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Stephen M. Koeth is assistant professor of history at the University of Notre Dame and an ordained Catholic priest.
REVIEWS
"As a product of 'Crabgrass Catholicism' myself -- since my family moved to the suburbs of St. Louis in 1954 -- I found Father Koeth's history perceptive and enlightening. Yes, politics is local; yes, so is formation in faith. You'll find this work as fascinating as did I."
— Timothy Michael Cardinal Dolan, Archbishop of New York
"Stephen Koeth's Crabgrass Catholicism vividly dissects post-World War Two Long Island Catholicism to explore fissures that have roiled American Catholicism ever since—divides between clergy and laity, eroding parish life, growing Catholic divisions over education, birth control, and abortion, and the emergence of conservative Catholic Republican politics—all superbly researched and deftly written. A fascinating, compelling book."
— Jon Butler, author of 'God in Gotham: The Miracle of Religion in Modern Manhattan'
"Thoroughly researched and well analyzed, this is a smart look at a volatile period in American religious history."
— Publishers Weekly
TABLE OF CONTENTS
List of Abbreviations
List of Figures and Tables
Introduction
1. An Urban Catholic World: Agrarianism, Urbanism, and the Ethnic Parish
2. The Suburban Church: Postwar Suburbanization and Catholic Institutional Expansion
3. From Church to Home: Spaces for Prayer, Education, and Charity in the Suburban Parish
4. Priests and Parishioners: Lay Associations, Parish Councils, and Church Leadership
5. Suburban Parish Boundaries: Race, Ethnicity, and Mixed Parishes in Suburbia
6. Suburban Catholic Education: Parochial Schools, CCD, and Ecclesiastical Polarization
7. Politics in Catholic Suburbia: State Funding, School Prayer, and Political Realignment
Epilogue: The Suburban Church and Religious Disaffiliation
Acknowledgments
Appendix
Notes
Index
REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
If you are a student who cannot use this book in printed form, BiblioVault may be able to supply you
with an electronic file for alternative access.
Please have the accessibility coordinator at your school fill out this form.