Nicole C. Kirk is Associate Professor and the Rev. Dr. J. Frank and Alice Schulman Chair of Unitarian Universalist History at Meadville Lombard Theological School. She is the author of Wanamaker's Temple: The Business of Religion in an Iconic Department Store (New York University Press, 2018).
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The John Wanamaker Department Store was one of America's first great temples of consumption. Nicole C. Kirk argues that [it] was more than a successful business enterprise, it was also a successful ministry. John Wanamaker was as committed to evangelicalism and the social gospel as he was to selling silks and satins. -- Marc Levinson * The Wall Street Journal * [A] trenchant...study of John Wanamaker and Wanamakers department stores through the lens of evangelical Protestantism at the turn of the 20th century....Kirk persuasively shows that Wanamakers Christian faith and business acumen informed one another within his own life and work. * Publishers Weekly * But there's more to this story than simply the evolution of retail: from small shops to department stores to online retailers that mirror the selection of retail palaces without the physical space. Nicole C. Kirk's new book Wanamaker's Temple delves into how John Wanamaker's religious and political beliefs shaped his retail empire, which at its peak included 16 stores around the mid-Atlantic region. * Smithsonian.com * "In the history of American religion, the intricate relationship between belief and commerce merits the closest attention. Nicole Kirk provides a richly researched and well organized study of one of the high priests of Protestant wealth. And she makes a wonderful contribution to the understanding of religious material culture and the aesthetics of commodity culture as an integral part of the rise of consumerism and the role that Protestantism has played in it. -- David Morgan,Duke University Adds a new chapter to a growing literature on the Protestant contours of American business, ably joining scholarship that has roundly challenged any lingering presumptions of declensionist secular separation between Christianity and capitalism in American history. * Journal of the American Academy of Religion *