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Evangelical Purity Culture and Its Discontents [Kietas viršelis]

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  • Formatas: Hardback, 176 pages, aukštis x plotis: 246x174 mm, weight: 510 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 09-May-2025
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1032996625
  • ISBN-13: 9781032996622
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 176 pages, aukštis x plotis: 246x174 mm, weight: 510 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 09-May-2025
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1032996625
  • ISBN-13: 9781032996622
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:

This volume is a collection of cutting-edge, interdisciplinary, and creative essays that establish a new approach to the study of evangelical purity culture. It is a critical starting point for anyone seeking to understand this movement or begin their own research.



This volume is a collection of cutting- edge, interdisciplinary, and creative essays that establishes a new approach to the study of evangelical purity culture. It is a critical starting point for anyone seeking to understand this movement or begin their own research.

The book brings together the work of the Purity Culture Research Collective, an independent and unaffiliated organization of scholars, mental health professionals, artists, and advocates dedicated to studying the origins and impact of evangelical purity culture. The study of purity culture is an interdisciplinary project, using a variety of theories and methods including those from psychology, religious studies, sociology, ethics, biblical/theological studies, queer studies, feminist studies, historical studies, and critical race studies. Chapters in this volume employ various methods of inquiry, with some framing their work in traditional academic prose, and others making use of self- reflexive analysis to acknowledge their own experiences as informing their arguments and conclusions. This collection of essays reflects emerging scholarship both within and beyond the academy and stands as an example of how traditional academic analysis can be released from the confines of disembodied scholarship and is enriched by a diversity of approaches.

This book was originally published as a special issue of Theology & Sexuality.

Recenzijos

Endorsements

This volume couldnt be more timely given the current cultural Zeitgeist. At a time when misogyny and white supremacy appear to be taking an even greater hold on the popular imagination, there is an urgent need to challenge and critique any dominant system that scaffolds these forms of structural violence. The chapters in this volume rise to this challenge, and they offer readers fresh insights into the damaging rhetoric perpetuated by White evangelical purity discourse. Together, they showcase a range of methods and approaches to addressing this topic, which will surely serve as an invaluable inspiration for current and future researchers. The comprehensive bibliography included at the end of the issue is also an added bonus. I look forward to reading more of each contributors work in the future and to seeing the work of others they will surely inspire.

Caroline Blythe, Founding Director of The Shiloh Project and author of Rape Culture, Purity Culture, and Coercive Control in Teen Girl Bibles

This volume is essential reading for a holistic understanding of a particular manifestation of purity ideology within religious communities, what has become known as purity culture created by White evangelical organizations and leaders and broadly infiltrating evangelical communities. The chapters are well-written, accessible, and interdisciplinary and transnational in scope. Their reach extends beyond the fairly narrow subfields of religious studies and gender studies. Indeed, this volume serves as a model for feminist methods that bridge traditional academic scholarship with personal reflection, for scholars of contemporary politics to understand the impact of White evangelicalism when it comes to gender and sexuality, and for scholars of race and ethnicity to understand the ways in which religion and sexuality are intertwined with racism, not just historically but also in the present day. I would be happy to assign the book in Feminist Theory, Sociology of Sexualities, Sociology of Religion, or Sociology of Culture.

Kelsey Burke, Professor of Sociology, University of Nebraska

For understandable historical reasons, scholarship on religion and sexual abuse has focused on Catholic contexts. With this collection of essays (and extensive bibliography), Kathryn House and Sara Moslener illuminate abuse in evangelical cultures, especially those that foreground sexual purity and its respective gender and racial ideologies. Informed by methodologies ranging from historical analysis to autoethnography, readers are shown the specific dynamics of sexual abuse that operate in evangelical purity cultures as well as the affective, theological, and institutional dynamics that allow them to flourish. This volume will be generative for survivors, clergy, parishioners, researchers, students, and journalists.

Kent Brintnall, Professor of Religious Studies, University of North Carolina at Charlotte

This anthology examines the multifaceted impact of evangelical purity culture through diverse, critical lenses. Disentangling the complex intertwining of gender, sex, race, and power, practical and scholarly voices speak to how purity culture shapes bodies with distorted messages about salvation and redemption. Intimate experiences emerge telling of enforced bodily control, disrupted identity development, and the reinforcement of racist ideals in the shape of a perceived universal moral good that perpetuates harm and leaves long lasting affective impacts. Harm meets courage in the process, as the authors carve a pathway for readers to imagine a different way of living, away from the negative impact of evangelical purity culture and toward the advocacy for healthy sexuality and gender formation.

Dr. Stephanie Arel, author of Bearing Witness: The Wounds of Mass Trauma at Memorial Museums and Affect Theory, Shame, and Christian Formation

Introduction: Evangelical Purity Culture and Its Discontents
1. Graham
Crackers and Good Girls: A Historical and Theoretical Case for Expanding the
Conceptual Reach of Purity Cultures Control of Bodies Assigned Female at
Birth
2. The Space Between: Liminal Time within Purity Culture
3. Pure to
Purpose Pipeline: Socializing Purity in White Womens International Aid Work
4. Navigating Evangelical Affect: Convictions, Promises, and Dissonance in
Adolescent Adherence to Purity Teaching
5. Womens Sexuality, Embodiment and
Evangelicalism
6. Daddy I Do: Purity Balls, Evangelicals Ideas of
Virginity, Family Values, and Whiteness
7. Purity Culture and the Limits of
Queer Evangelicalism
8. When Purity Cannot Save Us: On Matter Out of Place
and Democratic Hope Bibliography
Kathryn House, Ph.D., is Assistant Professor of Leadership Studies and Practical Theology and Chair of the Rev. Dr. Lee Barker Professorship of Leadership Studies at Meadville Lombard Theological School, Chicago, Illinois, USA. She holds a Ph.D. and M.Div. from Boston University School of Theology, Boston, Massachusetts, USA. House is ordained through the American Baptist Churches USA and Alliance of Baptists.

Sara Moslener, Ph.D., is a lecturer in the Department of Philosophy, Anthropology, and Religion at Central Michigan University, Michigan, USA. She is the author of Virgin Nation: Sexual Purity and American Adolescence (2015) and After Purity: Race, Sex, and Religion in White Christian America (forthcoming, 2025).