Purity Culture, Bodies, and Beliefs

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Autoethnography
beliefs
Bob Jones University
Category=QRVP
Christian Nationalism
Confession
Conservative Politics
Deconstruction
Derrida
Disability
eating disorders
embodiment
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
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eq_nobargain
Evangelical Christianity
Exvangelical
Fundamentalism
identity
implicit memory
Indigenous
Modesty Culture
power
purity
Purity Culture
Queerness
relationality
religious
religious trauma
ritual
Satanic panic
sexual abuse
shame
social responsibility
storytelling
Surveillance
tattooing
testimony
Transgender

Product details

  • ISBN 9780271101958
  • Weight: 454g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 12 May 2026
  • Publisher: Pennsylvania State University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Purity Culture, Bodies, and Beliefs confronts the enduring effects of religious trauma by centering the body as both a site of harm and a source of healing. This collection offers a necessary space for truth telling, grief, and renewal.

Bringing together critical autoethnographies and theoretical reflection, this volume examines how purity culture intersects with sexuality, gender, race, ability, class, neurodiversity, and spirituality. Contesting evangelicalism’s focus on bodily autonomy and sexual politics, contributors explore how embodied storytelling becomes a means of resistance and transformation. Addressing topics such as reproductive rights in fundamentalist contexts, eugenics-inspired rhetoric linking queerness and disability, and ritual practices like tattooing, each chapter testifies to the ways individuals remember, resist, and reclaim wholeness after harm. By foregrounding lived experience, the book shifts the study of religious rhetoric from theology and persuasion toward embodiment and trauma, illuminating not only what religious discourse does but what it costs. Scholars and students of religion, feminist and queer studies, and rhetoric—as well as activists engaged in justice and healing work—will find in this volume both critical insight and a call to action.

In addition to the editors, the contributors to this volume include Hannah Benefiel, Mathew Boedy, Carrie Drake, Susan Garza, Amanda K. Gross, Ada Hubrig, Deborah Leiter, Camille Kaminski Lewis, Chaim McNamee, Haleh Mir Miri, Tessi Muskrat, Christopher Peace, Mary Pitts, Joseph Richards, Elaine Schnabel, Julie J. Sisler, and Kylie Sommer.

Victoria Houser is Assistant Teaching Professor in the Writing Program at the University of California, Santa Barbara.

Mari Ramler is Associate Professor of English at Tennessee Technological University.