Professor | Books: Growing God's Family; Addicted to Lust; Taking America Back for God; The Flag and The Cross; Religion for Realists | CV: https://tinyurl.com/4hs86ntn
Samuel L. Perry is an American sociologist known for his research on American Christianity, politics, and sexual behavior. He is currently the Sam K. Viersen Presidential Professor of Sociology at the University of Oklahoma. The topics of Perry's books and articles have included American evangelicals and their social engagement, Christian nationalism, moral incongruence and religious responses to pornography use, religion and interracial marriage, Christian adoption and foster care, and English Bible translations. .. more
It’s vital that we understand religion and religious people. The social sciences are remiss to ignore either.
Hire more religion specialists.
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
Reposted by Samuel L. Perry
Reposted by Andrew L. Whitehead
Great work everyone.
They are unserious scholars.
Reposted by Anna O. Law, Ben H. Ansell, Matthew Bunn , and 38 more Anna O. Law, Ben H. Ansell, Matthew Bunn, Dorothy Bishop, Steve Peers, Robert W. Wallace, Samuel L. Perry, Caroline Krafft, Jonathan M. Gilligan, Martin Paul Eve, Pierre Bataille, Lesley A. Hall, Peter Campbell, Calvin K. Lai, Peter Holmes, Peter Schöttler, Jonathan Hopkin, Robert C. Richards, Rebecca Tushnet, Alan Richardson, Silvia Secchi, Julia Lynch, Andrew L. Whitehead, Nazita Lajevardi, Stacy D. VanDeveer, Margot C. Finn, Stephen Jones, Jens Rydgren, Ben Rosamond, Dana R. Fisher, Cailin O’Connor, Lisa Diedrich, Paul Nightingale, Catherine J. Frieman, Gerardo Martí, Gayle Kaufman, Anthony Pecqueux, Olúfẹ́mi Táíwò, Marianne Blanchard, Nathan P. Kalmoe, Martin Winter
Great work everyone.
HT: @cnarchive.bsky.social
Reposted by Samuel L. Perry
*chuckles at folks questioning whether Christian nationalism exists*
2. Don’t establish other revenue sources.
3. Rug-pull subscribers by pushing opinion side to the right.
4. Subscribers leave, revenue falls.
5. Enact crippling newsroom cuts.
But assuming the GOP goes along with it, it’s also a reminder of why the right’s insistence on ”federalism!” & “states rights!” is always just naked self-interest.
“It’s not dangerous federal overreach when we do it.”
Such a great way to think about the approach.
Let's go bigger and say "That's how human groups behave."
Certainly doesn't have to be specific to Christian right folks.
Reposted by Philip N. Cohen
Becoming more convinced this genre serves the same purpose as apologetics. It's not *really* intended to convince the unconvinced, but rather to reinforce in-group identity & norms ("this is what WE think") as distinct from "the world."
Reposted by Karen Benjamin Guzzo, Andrew L. Whitehead
There. Now you perfectly understand their claims on gun rights, freedom of speech, and freedom of religion.
Reposted by Anne Applebaum, Ben H. Ansell, Colin F. Camerer , and 17 more Anne Applebaum, Ben H. Ansell, Colin F. Camerer, Elena Litchman, Samuel L. Perry, Calvin K. Lai, Peter Holmes, Gernot Wagner, Laurent Pech, Julia Lynch, Beatriz Gallardo Paúls, James Goodwin, W Grant, Mark Rice, Greg Linden, Matthew P. McAllister, Blair Fix, John H. Knox, Stuart Shapiro, Peter Jacobs
This graph from John Burn-Murdoch sums it up. 🧵
donmoynihan.substack.com/p/autocracy-...
Reposted by Shannon Vallor, Kim L. Scheppele, Naomi Klein , and 19 more Shannon Vallor, Kim L. Scheppele, Naomi Klein, Jason Mittell, Nandita Sharma, Steve Peers, Samuel L. Perry, Jonathan M. Gilligan, Eric Goldman, Joni Lovenduski, Ben Worthy, Margot C. Finn, Stephen Ryan, Sahar F. Aziz, Helen Jefferson Lenskyj, Sarah Kaplan, Leah Stokes, Jo Littler, John H. Knox, Olivier Mannoni, Manisha Sinha, Nathan P. Kalmoe
Reposted by Samuel L. Perry
"Onishi traces the strange alliance between spiritual warfare and Silicon Valley libertarianism. At the center of it all is the desire for an unbound executive—one man, beyond checks, beyond balance, beyond democracy."
us.macmillan.com/books/978125...
New research shows laws that support Christianity or restrict non-Christian groups actually incline committed religious citizens to *disengage* from religious & civic participation. doi.org/10.1111/jssr...