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Christianity and the Limits of Minority Acceptance in America: God Loves (Almost) Everyone

(Hardback)

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Publishing Details

Full Title:

Christianity and the Limits of Minority Acceptance in America: God Loves (Almost) Everyone

Contributors:

By (Author) J. E. Sumerau
By (author) Ryan T. Cragun

ISBN:

9781498562997

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Lexington Books

Publication Date:

27th July 2018

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

Professional and Scholarly

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Gender studies: trans, transgender people and gender variance
Human rights, civil rights
Religious aspects of sexuality, gender and relationships
Gender studies, gender groups
Religious intolerance, persecution and conflict

Dewey:

277.308308

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

128

Dimensions:

Width 159mm, Height 237mm, Spine 14mm

Weight:

340g

Description

This book explores the ways Christian women in college make sense of bisexual, transgender, polyamorous, and atheist others. Specifically, it explores the ways they express tolerance for some sexual groups, such as lesbian and gay people, while maintaining condemnation of other sexual, gendered, or religious groups. In so doing, this book highlights the limits of Christian tolerance for the advancement of minority rights.

Reviews

Sumerau and Craguns study of how religious people make sense of the increasing visibility of transgender, intersex, bi+, poly, and unchurched individuals in their midst fills a gaping void in our understanding of how traditional, established gender and religious norms continue to shape civic life in the United States. While a dominant narrative in the sociology of religion extols the limited acceptance of gay and lesbian people within Christendom, the authors show that beneath this veneer of progress there is unabated disdain for those outside mono-, hetero- and cisnormativities. The authors use ethnographic interviews to uncover the contours of this intolerance and describe how it is constructed and maintained. This is a timely, sophisticated, and essential contribution to the sociologies of religion and sexuality. -- Rick Philips, University of North Florida
For decades, sociologists of religion and sexuality were stuck asking what American Christians thought about homosexuality. As Sumerau and Cragun illustrate, its time to ask new questions. The authors dig into topics usually left out by fellow sociologists of religion, exploring the far reaches of American Christian assumptions that privilege monogamy, monosexuality, and cisgender reality and that leave out bisexual, nonbinary, and nonreligious people. This timely book is a must read for understanding the complete landscape of religion and sexuality in contemporary America. -- Kelsy Burke, University of Nebraska, Lincoln
Sumerau and Craguns pathbreaking study sheds light on the ideological assumptions that still inform much social research on attitudesthat male and female are two mutually exclusive categories, that sexual orientation must reflect this dichotomy, that religion is the sole source of morality, and being cisgender in lifelong monogamy is necessary to demonstrate it. They reveal that the stereotypes that used to hound gays and lesbians, of being immature, sick, and/or untrustworthy, have not gone away but been displaced onto less conforming categories of people: bisexuals, trans people, polyamorous people, and atheists. This provocative study is a must-read for anyone seriously committed to value-neutral social science, and could shift the paradigm for social science research. -- Dawne Moon, Marquette University

Author Bio

J. E. Sumerau is assistant professor and director of applied sociology at the University of Tampa. Ryan T. Cragun is associate professor of sociology at the University of Tampa.

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