Good News for Common Goods
Multicultural Evangelicalism and Ethical Democracy in America
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51 358 Ft (48 912 Ft + 5% áfa)
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51 358 Ft
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A termék adatai:
- Kiadó OUP USA
- Megjelenés dátuma 2023. május 22.
- ISBN 9780197659694
- Kötéstípus Keménykötés
- Terjedelem406 oldal
- Méret 156x235x16 mm
- Súly 440 g
- Nyelv angol 464
Kategóriák
Rövid leírás:
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.
TöbbHosszú leírás:
What is the relationship between evangelical Christianity and democracy in America? In Good News for Common Goods, sociologist Wes Markofski explores how multicultural evangelicals across the United States are addressing race, poverty, inequality, politics, and religious and cultural difference in America's increasingly plural and polarized public arena. Based on extensive original research on multicultural evangelicals active in faith-based community organizing, community development, political advocacy, and public service organizations across the country-including over 90 in-depth interviews with racially diverse evangelical and non-evangelical activists, community leaders, and neighborhood residents-Markofski shows how the varieties of public religion practiced by evangelical Christians are not always bad news for non-evangelicals, people of color, and those advancing ethical democracy in the United States.
Markofski argues that multicultural evangelicals can and do work with others across race, class, religious, and political lines to achieve common good solutions to public problems, and that they can do so without abandoning their own distinctive convictions and identities or demanding that others do so. Just as ethical democracy calls for a more reflexive evangelicalism, it also calls for a more reflexive secularism and progressivism.
Markofski has written an ambitious and wide-ranging book mapping new terrain in the study of American evangelicalism and marking future directions for that broad religious movement so critical to American and global society. The book's compelling argument will matter for the future of evangelical Christianity, for the future of democracy, and for how we understand 'public religion' generally. We need this book for meeting the current historical moment.
Tartalomjegyzék:
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