Complete Past Issues
Archive Browse or search all of the articles
found in previous issues of Books & Culture. Our collection goes back
to the September/October 1996 issue.
Two Cheers for T.V. JULY/AUGUST 1998
Television is stupid, sleazy, and violent. It rots the brain and turns little
children into insatiable consumers. So why do we watch it?
Everything for Sale MAY/JUNE 1998
In an entirely free market, nothing is sacred.
30 Years After MARCH/APRIL 1998
Martin Luther King a Special Section
Nietzshe Was Right JANUARY/FEBRUARY 1998
Why prosecute a mother who drowns her children, or sons who kill their
parents? by Philip Yancey
Weeping Warriors NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 1997
The changing message of manly religion.
The Children's Story of Divorce SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 1997
Liberation is the dominant theme in the adult literature on divorce. Children's
books tell a different story.
American Icons JULY/AUGUST 1997
What is inspiring and dangerous about our love for American icon John Wayne?
How German was the Holocaust? MARCH/APRIL 1997
Three books, one of them a controversial bestseller, seek to explain how
and why thousands of ordinary Germans participated in the systematic murder
of Europe's Jews.
Kids Who Kill:
A Conversation with John Dilulio JANUARY/FEBRUARY 1997
John Dilulio is worried about a new breed of violent young criminal--and
he wants you to be worried, too. The answer? Look to the inner--city churches,
and get involved.
The Go-Everywhere Gospel NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 1996
Andrew Walls' The Missionary Movement in Christian History moves
from the spread of Christianity in modern Africa to America as a missionary
trophy to insights about the nature of Christian faith itself.
Muzzling Religion SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 1996
George Marsden, Mark Noll, and others explore new strategies for teaching
religion at secular universities and divinity schools.