2019
DOI: 10.1111/jssr.12583
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Presidential Address: Religion and Power—A Return to the Roots of Social Scientific Scholarship

Abstract: Early social scientists, including Karl Marx, Max Weber, and W. E. B. DuBois, recognized the importance of religion for power systems. Since the beginning of the 20th century, however, there has been a decline in scholars examining how religion matters for power. This address proposes that scholars bring religion back to the center of understanding the production, deconstruction, and distribution of power as religion is critical to the flows of power in the social world. I propose that furthering an agenda tha… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…We agree with Avishai and Irby that these topics that cross subfields are an opportunity for cross‐fertilization and integration and hope future work will draw more broadly on a wider range of theories, methods, approaches, and samples. We also agree with Edwards (2019) on the importance of recognizing and examining power as a central factor and we suggested three frameworks–the gender lens perspective promoted by Avishai and others (Avishai, Jafar, and Rinaldo 2015), the cultural analysis frame set forth by Edgell and others (Edgell 2012), and the intersectional or complex religion approach advanced by Wilde and others (Wilde and Glassman 2016)–that we believe can and should be integrated for the examination of power in relation to gender, sexuality, and religion. Intersectionality is in some ways a particularly timely approach and scholars working on gender, sexuality, and religion have an opportunity to bring religion into broader conversations, highlighting how religion–and perhaps especially ethnoreligious identity and other entanglements between religion and ethnicity, nationality, and culture–intersects with other identities in the matrix of domination (Collins 2000).…”
Section: Question 10: What Is Next In the Study Of Gender Sexuality A...supporting
confidence: 91%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…We agree with Avishai and Irby that these topics that cross subfields are an opportunity for cross‐fertilization and integration and hope future work will draw more broadly on a wider range of theories, methods, approaches, and samples. We also agree with Edwards (2019) on the importance of recognizing and examining power as a central factor and we suggested three frameworks–the gender lens perspective promoted by Avishai and others (Avishai, Jafar, and Rinaldo 2015), the cultural analysis frame set forth by Edgell and others (Edgell 2012), and the intersectional or complex religion approach advanced by Wilde and others (Wilde and Glassman 2016)–that we believe can and should be integrated for the examination of power in relation to gender, sexuality, and religion. Intersectionality is in some ways a particularly timely approach and scholars working on gender, sexuality, and religion have an opportunity to bring religion into broader conversations, highlighting how religion–and perhaps especially ethnoreligious identity and other entanglements between religion and ethnicity, nationality, and culture–intersects with other identities in the matrix of domination (Collins 2000).…”
Section: Question 10: What Is Next In the Study Of Gender Sexuality A...supporting
confidence: 91%
“…We agree with Avishai and Irby that these topics that cross subfields are an opportunity for cross-fertilization and integration and hope future work will draw more broadly on a wider range of theories, methods, approaches, and samples. We also agree with Edwards (2019) on the importance of recognizing and examining power as a central factor and we suggested three frameworks-the gender lens perspective promoted by Avishai and others (Avishai, Jafar, and Rinaldo 2015), the cultural analysis frame set forth by Edgell and others (Edgell 2012), and the intersectional or complex religion approach advanced by Wilde and others (Wilde and Glassman 2016)-that we believe can and should be integrated for the examination of power in relation to gender, sexuality, and religion.…”
Section: Future Directions In Ways To Approach Gender Sexuality and Religionsupporting
confidence: 85%
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“…Third, attending to race and ethnicity is another important area within congregational studies (Edwards 2019). For example, Emerson and Smith (2001) noted the racial and ethnic homogeneity and boundedness of most congregations, and thus the ways congregations can divide by races and ethnicities.…”
Section: Congregationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As church-based religion declined in Europe, the numbers choosing the option “no religion” in surveys increased, with a similar trend also observed in the United States (Cragun et al, 2017). This phenomenon, alongside the rise at the turn of the Millennium of a publicly prominent and vocal group of “New Atheists” (Kettell, 2013), prompted the growth of sociological research on nonreligion and the secular both sides of the Atlantic. Such research has demonstrated that nonreligion constitutes much more than just an absence of religion.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%