Key Categories in the Study of Religion
Contexts and Critiques
Rebekka King [+–]
Middle Tennessee State University
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Key Categories in the Study of Religion builds upon the groundwork laid by previous NAASR Working Papers titles in order to bring us full circle to the symbiotic relationship between context and critique. This volume assembles diverse sets of data to consider pertinent categories in which critique occurs. By looking at intentionally disparate case studies, the volume centers on four key contextual categories which stand at the heart of the academic study of religion: Citizenship and Politics, Class and Economy, Gender and Sexuality, and Race and Ethnicity. The contributors to this volume explore questions concerning how scholars construct such categories and/or critique scholars who do? Who decides how to approach the critical study of these topics? What impact does the context of a scholar’s research have on the means and method of a given critique? Using these enquiries as a starting point, Key Categories in the Study of Religion investigates the ways that method, theory, and data are mobilized via context as the primary impetus for critical analysis.
Under the purview of the aforementioned specific categories, this volume brings together diverse data domains to explore the similarities and differences that emerge when one theoretical framework moves from domain to domain. In the same way that scholars have argued against an essentialist understanding of “religion,” so too should the key categories of analysis upon which this volume focuses be employed within the matrix of their social, cultural, and ideological contexts.
Each section begins with an orienting essay that explores its category. These introductory chapters include: i) an analysis of the construction of categories in academic literature; ii) an argument either advocating or critiquing scholarship carried out in that vein; and iii) an exploration of its implications for the study of religion. Each chapter is followed by four responses authored by scholars intentionally selected to highlight diverse contexts: subjects, fields, and methods. They extend the orienting essay’s conclusions by offering novel analysis vis-à-vis their own scholarly expertise and subject matter. These chapters underscore instances of both congruence and difference to further refine our understanding of possible forms of critique relevant to each category.
For those wishing to buy chapters only: Please note that due to the shorter extent of chapters individual Parts will be sold as a unit rather than individual chapters.
Series: NAASR Working Papers
Table of Contents
Introduction
Part I: Citizenship and Politics
University. He teaches classes on American religious history and is the author of Christian
Reconstruction: R. J. Rushdoony and American Religious Conservatism (2015)
focuses on the intersection of the film studies, method, and theory in the study of religion,
continental philosophy, and History of Religions. He is the co-editor of Representing Religion in Film and the creator and co-host of the podcast Fascism in Cinema.
Louisiana State University. Her work focuses on religion, politics, media, and technology.
University. He teaches classes on American religious history and is the author of Christian
Reconstruction: R. J. Rushdoony and American Religious Conservatism (2015)
Part II: Race and Ethnicity
the University of Miami, Coral Gables. An editor at the Database of Religious History, her
articles have appeared in Classical Quarterly and Jewish Studies Quarterly, among other publications. Her first monograph, The Origins of Early Christian Literature: Contextualizing the New Testament within Greco-Roman Literary Culture was recently published with Cambridge University Press.
Part III: Gender and Sexuality
teaches in the Religious Studies Department and the College. She completed her PhD in
History of Religions at the University of Chicago Divinity School in 2021. Her work focuses
on the ways that women’s reproductive bodies are linked to projects of identity construction, maintenance, and negotiation in Nigerian Pentecostal immigrant communities in the United States. In the classroom she thinks with students about categories and ideas in the study of religion through mundane phenomena like love, sororities, Jane Austen, and Alabama football (Roll Tide).
Philosophical and Religious Studies (SHPRS). His areas of expertise are Hebrew Bible,
Jewish history, genocide studies, and trauma and memory. He is on the board of directors
for both Genocide Awareness Week and the Phoenix Holocaust Association.
Part IV: Class and Economy
End Matter

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