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M. Hart

    Wintermond
    Index Exporgatorius Anglicanus
    Cartooning Lovable Dogs & Cats
    Shoujo Basics
    That Old-Time Religion in Modern America
    Young Artists Draw Animals
    • 2020
    • 2015

      Features easy tips and techniques designed to give you the cartooning skills you need to draw these furry friends.

      Cartooning Lovable Dogs & Cats
    • 2013

      Shows budding artists how to draw all their favourite animals, familiar household pets, as well as exotic animals from around the world. This book serves up fun and easy-to-follow child-friendly art instruction on drawing animals.

      Young Artists Draw Animals
    • 2013

      Shoujo Basics

      • 64 pages
      • 3 hours of reading

      "Over the past two decades, Christopher Hart's name has become synonymous with ""how-to-draw."" Now, in his new series, Hart offers crash courses in 10 of the most popular aspects of manga, culled from the best of his backlist catalog and repackaged into fresh, accessible, and inexpensive guides that encourage the reader to practice his or her new-found skills directly in the book."

      Shoujo Basics
    • 2003

      That Old-Time Religion in Modern America

      • 156 pages
      • 6 hours of reading
      3.8(61)Add rating

      "In this cogent account, the noted historian of religion D. G. Hart unpacks evangelicalism's current reputation by tracing its development over the course of the twentieth century. He shows how evangelicals entered the century as full partners in the Protestant denominations and agencies that molded American cultural and intellectual life. Although the fundamentalist controversy of the 1920s marginalized evangelicals in America's largest denominations, their views about the individual, society, and families went virtually unchallenged in American society because of the ongoing dominance of Protestant churches and institutions.". "After 1960, when the United States entered a period sometimes called "post-Protestant," evangelicals began to assert themselves more aggressively in politics and culture, seeking to preserve a Christian society. These evangelical responses to Protestantism's waning influence in America reveal a curious feature of twentieth-century life: despite its conformity to American ideals, since the 1970s evangelical Protestantism has been perceived as alien to other Americans. Mr. Hart's illuminating study offers an explanation for this change in evangelicalism's fortunes by analyzing the successes and limitations of this popular religious movement."--BOOK JACKET.

      That Old-Time Religion in Modern America