Sociologist Wes Markofski explores how multicultural evangelicals across the U.S. are addressing race, poverty, inequality, politics, and religious difference in America's increasingly plural and polarized public arena. Through his research in Portland, Atlanta, Los Angeles, and Boston, Markofski shows that the varieties of public religion practiced by evangelical Christians are not always and need not be bad news for non-evangelicals, people of color, and those committed to ethical democracy.
Sociologist Wes Markofski explores how multicultural evangelicals across the U.S. are addressing race, poverty, inequality, politics, and religious difference in America's increasingly plural and polarized public arena. Through his research in Portland, Atlanta, Los Angeles, and Boston, Markofski shows that the varieties of public religion practiced by evangelical Christians are not always and need not be bad news for non-evangelicals, people of color, and those committed to ethical democracy.
Wes Markofski is Chair and Associate Professor of Sociology in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at Carleton College and received his Ph.D. in Sociology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He is the author of New Monasticism and the Transformation of American Evangelicalism.
Inhaltsangabe
* Acknowledgments * Introduction: Collaboration for Common Goods: Evangelicals and Others Seeking Justice and Power Together * Chapter 1: Good News? Common Goods? Multicultural Evangelicalism? Ethical Democracy? * Chapter 2: Engaging Race and Inequality * Chapter 3: Engaging Poverty and Inequality * Chapter 4: Engaging Politics, Culture, and Religious Difference * Chapter 5: Reflexive Evangelicalism: Learning from Experience and Scripture * Chapter 6: Ethical Democracy and Four Modes of Social Reflexivity * Conclusion: Multicultural Evangelicalism and Democracy in America * Appendix: Multisite Ethnography and the Exceptional Case Method * References
* Acknowledgments * Introduction: Collaboration for Common Goods: Evangelicals and Others Seeking Justice and Power Together * Chapter 1: Good News? Common Goods? Multicultural Evangelicalism? Ethical Democracy? * Chapter 2: Engaging Race and Inequality * Chapter 3: Engaging Poverty and Inequality * Chapter 4: Engaging Politics, Culture, and Religious Difference * Chapter 5: Reflexive Evangelicalism: Learning from Experience and Scripture * Chapter 6: Ethical Democracy and Four Modes of Social Reflexivity * Conclusion: Multicultural Evangelicalism and Democracy in America * Appendix: Multisite Ethnography and the Exceptional Case Method * References
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