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After centuries of enmity, why did Europeâ s Catholics and Protestants reconcile? Udi Greenberg argues that modern Christian cooperation arose not from tolerance but from fears of socialism, feminism, and Afro-Asian liberation movements. In seeking to preserve Christian life, these former rivals forged a lasting alliance that remade the continent.

Produktbeschreibung
After centuries of enmity, why did Europeâ s Catholics and Protestants reconcile? Udi Greenberg argues that modern Christian cooperation arose not from tolerance but from fears of socialism, feminism, and Afro-Asian liberation movements. In seeking to preserve Christian life, these former rivals forged a lasting alliance that remade the continent.
Autorenporträt
Udi Greenberg is Associate Professor of History at Dartmouth College. Author of The Weimar Century: German Émigrés and the Ideological Foundations of the Cold War, he has written on European thought and politics for the New Republic, The Nation, and Dissent.