The Religion of Whiteness: How Racism Distorts Christian Faith
Autor Michael O. Emerson, Glenn E. Bracey IIen Limba Engleză Hardback – 26 sep 2024
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780197746288
ISBN-10: 0197746284
Pagini: 208
Dimensiuni: 132 x 201 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.36 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0197746284
Pagini: 208
Dimensiuni: 132 x 201 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.36 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
As disturbing in its implications as it is informative in its data, this book will become canonical content for any analysis of race and religion for decades to come. I couldn't stop highlighting and note-taking!
The Religion of Whiteness presents a provocative thesis that all Americans-whether Christian or not-will be forced to engage. Marshalling an impressive collection of empirical data, Emerson and Bracey's work deserves a wide reading. It will likely shape the discussion around race and American Christianity for years to come.
Sometimes we must look at what we fear to see the depth of the problem we know we have. Whiteness is that problem. Emerson and Bracey's The Religion of Whiteness makes such looking productive and possibly healing. At a moment, when so many people refuse to accept the truth of the problem of whiteness, this book dispels the myths, lies, and evasions that mark white American Christianity. If there is a future for Christianity in the United States (and many other places) it will require accepting the truth this book illumines and choosing to walk in its light.
[T]he authors persuasively depict a religious movement that seeks to defend its destructive principles at all costs. This is sure to spark debate.
The authors are careful to support this assertion through quantitative survey data. Some of the most powerful moments, though, come from interviews with people who have been wounded and alienated from their Christian communities for opposing tenets of the religion of whiteness.
The Religion of Whiteness presents a provocative thesis that all Americans-whether Christian or not-will be forced to engage. Marshalling an impressive collection of empirical data, Emerson and Bracey's work deserves a wide reading. It will likely shape the discussion around race and American Christianity for years to come.
Sometimes we must look at what we fear to see the depth of the problem we know we have. Whiteness is that problem. Emerson and Bracey's The Religion of Whiteness makes such looking productive and possibly healing. At a moment, when so many people refuse to accept the truth of the problem of whiteness, this book dispels the myths, lies, and evasions that mark white American Christianity. If there is a future for Christianity in the United States (and many other places) it will require accepting the truth this book illumines and choosing to walk in its light.
[T]he authors persuasively depict a religious movement that seeks to defend its destructive principles at all costs. This is sure to spark debate.
The authors are careful to support this assertion through quantitative survey data. Some of the most powerful moments, though, come from interviews with people who have been wounded and alienated from their Christian communities for opposing tenets of the religion of whiteness.
Notă biografică
Michael O. Emerson is the author of over 15 books and 100 other publications. Considered one of the nation's leading scholars of religion and race, he has won multiple research and teaching awards. His work has been funded by several million dollars in grants, and he has appeared on national and international media outlets for the past quarter of a century. As the Chavanne Fellow in Religion and Public Policy at Rice University's Baker Institute for Public Policy, a leading non-partisan thinktank, he works to communicate the implications of American religious life for national policies, and to help policymakers understand the impact of policy on U.S. religions. Glenn E. Bracey II is an Assistant Professor of Sociology at Villanova University, where his work specializes in race, religion, and social movements. Bracey is an award-winning teacher and scholar with publications in leading academic journals. An emerging voice on issues ranging from critical race theory to racial protests andnational politics, Bracey has appeared in several national media outlets.