Daniel Winchester
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bishopofwestsaxons.bsky.social
Daniel Winchester
@bishopofwestsaxons.bsky.social
Sociologist with interests in religion, social theory, culture, and ethnography. Enthusiastic about beer, bikes, and books.

A list of my knowledge widgets, courtesy of Google Scholar: https://tinyurl.com/yjxtzarj
Pinned
Re: my BSky handle.

There was a glorious moment in time when, if you googled my name, you would get the search result below. Sadly, Google appears to have "fixed" this issue. 😒
DOOM take > Hot take
November 14, 2025 at 12:37 AM
Reposted by Daniel Winchester
The percentage of Americans who say religion is an important part of their lives declined from 66% in 2015 to 49% in 2025. Among the fastest declines in the world.
news.gallup.com/poll/697676/...
November 13, 2025 at 2:02 PM
Reposted by Daniel Winchester
Indiana University has reversed course on its decision to end print publication of the Indiana Daily Student, its award-winning student newspaper, after two weeks of intensive blowback, including accusations of censorship and canceled alumni...

indianacitizen.org/temporary-re...
#HoosierSky #edchat
‘TEMPORARY REPRIEVE’? IU reverses course and will print student paper, but distrust remains - THE INDIANA CITIZEN
By Steven Hinnefeld The Indiana Citizen October 31, 2025 Indiana University has reversed course on its decision to end print publication of the Indiana Daily Student, its award-winning student…
indianacitizen.org
November 3, 2025 at 11:02 AM
BOILER UP
October 18, 2025 at 6:59 PM
Reposted by Daniel Winchester
In our newest issue, Adam Kotanko @akotanko.bsky.social and Dan Winchester @bishopofwestsaxons.bsky.social explore how groups respond to accusation of scandal through an analysis of evangelical Protestants’ statements of American missionary John Chau. Read it here link.springer.com/article/10.1....
Making a Martyr?: Scandal, Symbolic Power, and the Controversial Death of Evangelical Missionary John Chau - Qualitative Sociology
How do groups respond to accusations of scandal? Because scandals pose significant risks of moral stigma and loss of status to those associated with them, sociologists have analyzed how actors within an accused community use strategies like denial, scapegoating, public apologies, etc. to manage the general public’s response to and interpretation of scandalous claims. While this focus on groups’ “external” responses to scandal has been productive, limited scholarship examines how actors also seek to interpretively manage scandals “internally,” among fellow members of their communities. Through an analysis of evangelical Protestants’ public statements concerning John Chau, an American missionary who garnered international media attention and public controversy after being killed by an isolated tribal group whom he sought to evangelize, we demonstrate how representatives of two factions of the American evangelical field—conservative and progressive, respectively—leveraged scandal as an opportunity to promote their respective visions of ‘authentic evangelicalism” to their broader evangelical audience. More specifically, our findings demonstrate how these spokespersons converted scandalizing accusations made against Chau and American evangelicalism into symbolic resources for solidifying or transforming the professed values and collective identities of their co-religionists. Ultimately, our study demonstrates how scandals not only reveal and potentially reconfigure moral boundaries and conflicts between accusers and accused—as previous sociological research has shown—but that scandals may also involve field-level conflict and contestation among the morally accused themselves, creating opportunities for actors to (re)shape their contemporaries’ moral certainties and collective self-understandings.
link.springer.com
October 13, 2025 at 2:02 PM
ATTENTION PLEASE. Open access in current issue of @jssreligion.bsky.social

"...[J]ust like the people we study, how scholars make meaning of religious worlds is dependent on what we learn to bring into focus and what we are taught to ignore. As such, we must learn to pay attention to attention."
Becoming Religious as an Education of Attention
A vast literature in the social scientific study of religion demonstrates that religious people are made not born. More specifically, researchers have shown that becoming religious is something that ...
onlinelibrary.wiley.com
October 7, 2025 at 4:20 PM
Reposted by Daniel Winchester
Use of the word "evil" in official congressional e-newsletters, over time, by party
September 15, 2025 at 12:52 PM
Reposted by Daniel Winchester
Amid the stress of the shutdown and the Trump administration’s ethical transgressions with trying to influence military leaders to be a politicized for force— how does this affect civ servants and their choices to stay, speak up, or go?
October 1, 2025 at 1:56 PM
Reposted by Daniel Winchester
1. In the wake of the murder of Charlie Kirk, his admirers are venerating him as a principled champion of free speech.

Ironically, some of the same people are participating in an organized campaign demanding that anyone with a different view of Kirk's political legacy be fired.
Republicans celebrate Kirk as free speech champion, demand critics be fired
A coordinated pressure campaign has cost dozens of people their jobs.
popular.info
September 16, 2025 at 1:25 PM
🤖✝️
nature.com Nature @nature.com · Sep 15
The rise of generative AI chatbots has led to the creation of tools that purport to offer people the opportunity to speak directly with religious figures, such as Jesus Christ

go.nature.com/4687Ccg
The chatbots claiming to be Jesus: spreading gospel or heresy?
Jesus chatbots aren't the only AI technologies seeping into religious practice. Some worshippers don't agree with the use of them.
go.nature.com
September 15, 2025 at 2:17 PM
Thanks, @jlkucinskas.bsky.social! It was a pleasure to host you and learn more about your fantastic book!
Amazing trip to Perdue Sociology. For those interested in studying religion(@asareligion.bsky.social), this is one of the best places to go! Curious & supportive scholars who care about pedagogy & research in a big and growing department. And one of the best places to give talks! A gem for sure.
September 13, 2025 at 4:21 PM
Looking forward to it!
Briefly back at the Indy airport and while it’s comforting to be at a familiar airport that once signaled almost home— some things have changed for the better.

And giving a talk on The Loyalty Trap tomorrow afternoon at Purdue for those nearby!
September 12, 2025 at 1:36 AM
Reposted by Daniel Winchester
Thread explaining how warped coverage that constantly promotes bad news (e.g. about crime rates) and ignores good news about the same topics, creates a distorted perception of reality — dynamics that make it difficult for a democratic country to identify, diagnose, and address actual problems.
1. This week, the FBI released its comprehensive crime report for 2024, which revealed that both VIOLENT CRIME and PROPERTY CRIME reached their LOWEST LEVELS SINCE THE 1960s

This a massive story. But you might not have heard about it, even if you follow the news closely.

Here's why.
Why you might not know that 2024 was America's safest year since the 1960s
An overwhelming majority of Americans, 64 percent, believe that crime increased across the country in 2024, according to a Gallup survey conducted late last year.
popular.info
August 7, 2025 at 2:25 PM
NEW PREPRINT: RELIGION UNBUNDLED
Earlier this week at #ASA2025, @ruthbraunstein.bsky.social, @jlkucinskas.bsky.social, Brian Steensland, and I presented ideas for a new paradigm for the 21st-Century sociology of American religion. Full MS at SocArXiv for all those interested:
osf.io/preprints/so...
OSF
osf.io
August 15, 2025 at 7:43 PM
It has come my attention that, thanks to a reddit post on r/science, this article with @drmann.bsky.social on the quasi-religious characteristics of right-wing news media is trending. A temporary open access link from Sage below for anyone interested in digging into the argument and framework.
Sage Journals: Discover world-class research
Subscription and open access journals from Sage, the world's leading independent academic publisher.
journals.sagepub.com
August 1, 2025 at 2:16 PM
Reposted by Daniel Winchester
As a part of our Teaching Theory Special Series, First Publics invited Drs. Wesley Longhofer and Daniel Winchester to talk about their theory reader, Social Theory Re-Wired.

Check it out via the link 🔗 in our bio or by visiting:
First Publics
The Society Pages (TSP) is an open-access social science project headquartered in the Department of Sociology at the University of Minnesota
thesocietypages.org
July 21, 2025 at 5:00 PM
"There's no greater proof of the elasticity of American identity than the fact that the descendants of immigrants...have wormed their way into the heart of nativist politics to the point they can pretend they have belonged here all along and now they get to judge who should and shouldn't belong."
The Not-So-Great Replacement Theory, Revisited
The success of Zohran Mamdani in the mayoral primary in New York City has predictably set off the worst possible takes from the worst possible people. And while I'm generally loathe to drag out any po...
campaign-trails.ghost.io
June 26, 2025 at 7:14 PM
NEW ARTICLE/OPEN ACCESS
Proud to share my PhD advisee, @akotanko.bsky.social's, recent publication in Qualitative Soc. Adam and I worked on this one together, which was a great collaborative experience, but he is very much the lead author.

The first of many to come from the future Dr. Kotanko!
Making a Martyr?: Scandal, Symbolic Power, and the Controversial Death of Evangelical Missionary John Chau - Qualitative Sociology
How do groups respond to accusations of scandal? Because scandals pose significant risks of moral stigma and loss of status to those associated with them, sociologists have analyzed how actors within ...
link.springer.com
June 23, 2025 at 4:29 PM
Co-signed. I'm currently serving on the SSSR Committee leading this search, so if you have any questions or want additional info about the position, please drop me a line.
Are you a social scientist who studies religion, looking for a way to make a big impact on both the field and the public's understanding of religion? I hope you'll consider applying to become the next editor of the Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion @jssreligion.bsky.social
June 13, 2025 at 1:38 AM
Good insights from @ruthbraunstein.bsky.social here.

What are many MAGA believers getting from the movement?

"...[A] feeling of belonging, purpose, pride. In a community where those goods are in scant supply, even cheap versions of them are likely viewed as better than nothing."
"MAGA plays to a social desert"
Plus, the new faces of survivalism and some political ephemera from my vaults.
ruthbraunstein.substack.com
June 12, 2025 at 6:10 PM
Purdue University has decided to suppress its own student newspaper under the cover of "institutional neutrality". Great look here, Big Boiler.
Purdue refuses to distribute The Exponent after 50 years of doing so
Purdue University told The Purdue Exponent last Friday they will no longer assist in the distribution of newspapers. Purdue has aided in the circulation of The Exponent for the past 50 years.
www.purdueexponent.org
June 5, 2025 at 12:50 PM
NERDY PODCAST ALERT
@drmann.bsky.social and I explain what we mean when we say right-wing news is a quasi-religious phenomenon. In short: massive #s of Americans turn to the RW news system to express moral solidarity, make meaning, and cultivate and share sacred beliefs.
sagesociology.libsyn.com
Sage Sociology
Welcome to the official free Podcast from Sage for Sociology. Sage is a leading international publisher of journals, books, and electronic media for academic, educational, and professional markets wi...
sagesociology.libsyn.com
June 2, 2025 at 7:22 PM
Reposted by Daniel Winchester
The solution to the Democrats messaging problem isn’t to replicate the rw media ecosystem, but to recognize what makes it powerful, including the participatory storytelling and sense of agency it provides to its audiences, and to adapt those dynamics in ways that align w/ Dem/progressive values.
Democratic strategists are pushing the party's megadonors to invest in an army of left-leaning online influencers, pushing to “find the next Joe Rogan,” to help the party capture the digital mojo that helped President Trump win, documents show.
Democrats Throw Money at a Problem: Countering G.O.P. Clout Online
www.nytimes.com
May 27, 2025 at 10:42 PM
Good point and all, @profsamperry.bsky.social. But "Faces of the Masturbator" is a 🔥 band name.
May 14, 2025 at 4:02 PM