
Gay Religion
Author(s): Scott Thumma (Editor), Edward R. Gray
- Publisher: AltaMira Press
- Publication Date: 10 Dec. 2004
- Language: English
- Print length: 400 pages
- ISBN-10: 0759103259
- ISBN-13: 9780759103252
Book Description
Editorial Reviews
Review
Gay Religion, with its valuable and insightful array of articles, maps an uncharted terrain of translesbigay spirituality in contemporary American religious culture. The authors provide insight into the diverse strategies that translesbigays use to negotiate between institutional religion and their sexual orientation identities. It also highlights creative, innovative forms of rainbow spirituality, from queer appropriation of Catholic saints, to reconciling congregations to the spiritual experiences of leather spirituality, evangelical gospel drag, and circuit parties. The volume testifies to the vibrant spirituality of a community, often oppressed by religion. — Robert Goss, MCC Pastor/Theologian and author of Jesus ACTED UP and Queering Christ.
Gay Religion provides a valuable resource, both as a text and a typology, to continue studying and documenting the relationship between homosexuality and religion in the United States in the twenty-first century. It will be a valuable resource in the classroom to enable students to see the complexity of the LGBT lifestyle both in American religion and society. Furthermore, Gay Religion will spur current students to become scholars of the emerging field of gay religion. — Craig This ―
Journal Of Men, Masculinities and SpiritualityPutting a human face on what is too often contested as an abstract concept, Thumma and Gray and their contributors do not so much debate the possibility of gay religion as portray its reality. In vivid accounts of Protestant, Catholic, Jewish, Buddhist, Santeria, neo-Pagan and other LGBT communities, readers will encounter much that is comfortingly familiar alongside that which is new and startling. The collection and the realities it depicts testify to the inexhaustible adaptability and diversity of American religion. This is an important and timely book. — R Stephen Warner, professor of sociology, University of Illinois at Chicago
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