Religious familism, or ideology about ‘‘the good family,’ ’ has been central to the culture and practice of local religious communities in the United States. Recent research has suggested that the ‘‘Ozzie and Harriet’ ’ familism domin-ant among mainstream religious groups in the 1950s religious expansion has remained formative for many local religious communities in the intervening decades. This research suggests that religious familism shapes how gender is symbolized and enacted in local religious communities and leads to differ-ences in the meaning of religious participation for contemporary men and women. However, this work has been based largely on studies of white, mid-dle-class religious communities. In this article, we analyze the re...
Previous studies of religious institutions, social change and pluralism have adhered to the conventi...
While researchers have long contended that religious denominations promote and sustain subcultural ...
In Awesome Families, Kathleen Jenkins draws on four years of ethnographic research to explain how an...
Drawing from the extensive research that has been performed recently within the sociology of religio...
A subset of research on gender in religion in the United States has demonstrated that the gender-ord...
Evangelical churches in the United States are often portrayed as misogynistic due to their adherence...
This introduction focuses on religious beliefs in American families.https://digitalcommons.chapman.e...
While researchers have long contended that religious denominations promote and sustain \u27\u27subcu...
Numerous studies have documented religious variations in gender ideology in the United States. Despi...
Evangelical Protestants are an influential force in the world of politics, particularly in bringing ...
Family and religious ideologies may influence gender role attitudes in the United States, where gend...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. August 2013. Major: Sociology. Advisors: Dr. Penny Edgel...
Throughout American history, we have seen religion used to allow unfair and oppressive practices to ...
ii Laura Sanchez, Advisor In recent decades, societal expectations about marital roles became genera...
Drawing on the scholarship of Critical Religion, this article shows how the modern category “religio...
Previous studies of religious institutions, social change and pluralism have adhered to the conventi...
While researchers have long contended that religious denominations promote and sustain subcultural ...
In Awesome Families, Kathleen Jenkins draws on four years of ethnographic research to explain how an...
Drawing from the extensive research that has been performed recently within the sociology of religio...
A subset of research on gender in religion in the United States has demonstrated that the gender-ord...
Evangelical churches in the United States are often portrayed as misogynistic due to their adherence...
This introduction focuses on religious beliefs in American families.https://digitalcommons.chapman.e...
While researchers have long contended that religious denominations promote and sustain \u27\u27subcu...
Numerous studies have documented religious variations in gender ideology in the United States. Despi...
Evangelical Protestants are an influential force in the world of politics, particularly in bringing ...
Family and religious ideologies may influence gender role attitudes in the United States, where gend...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. August 2013. Major: Sociology. Advisors: Dr. Penny Edgel...
Throughout American history, we have seen religion used to allow unfair and oppressive practices to ...
ii Laura Sanchez, Advisor In recent decades, societal expectations about marital roles became genera...
Drawing on the scholarship of Critical Religion, this article shows how the modern category “religio...
Previous studies of religious institutions, social change and pluralism have adhered to the conventi...
While researchers have long contended that religious denominations promote and sustain subcultural ...
In Awesome Families, Kathleen Jenkins draws on four years of ethnographic research to explain how an...