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Showing posts with the label methods and theory

The R&AC Conference: Taking Religion "Seriously"

The Formation of Conscience: A Few Thoughts on Theological Language and Religious Reality

Theory, Football-Religion, and Metaphors

Star Wars as American Religion

Spirits Rejoice at Notre Dame

Data and Conversation Partners in American Religious Studies

African American Religion as a category

"Influential, Pivotal, Seminal, or Otherwise Important": Recommended and Essential Reading in North American Religions

A Mixtape on Theory & 'Religion' Dedicated to American Historians: Side A

The Religious and The Political, Or, Why the Nation of Islam Bamboozles My Students

World Religions, American Religions, the Object of Study, and an Ode to Bruce Lincoln

3 Hypotheses About "American Religions" and "American Religious History" That I Can't Get Out of My Head

One Dangerous Thought Experiment and Two New Marginalia Interviews

The Return of the Longue Durée in American Religious History

America in the World, the World in America

Four Questions with David Morgan

New Methodologies (and the Ensuing Yawn)

Quantifying the American Tract Society: Using Library Catalog Data for Historical Research

Teaching Introduction to Religion: Or How Tupac and Mary Douglas Became Best Friends

"I have tried to recover a sense of humanity..."