Race, Gender, Sexuality, and Religion in North America

Date
2017-02-01
Authors
Petro, Anthony
Version
Embargo Date
2019-02-01
OA Version
Citation
Anthony Petro. 2017. "Race, Gender, Sexuality, and Religion in North America." Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Religion, February 2017, pp. 1-33. https://doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780199340378.013.488
Abstract
The history of religion in the United States cannot be understood without attending to histories of race, gender, and sexuality. Since the 1960s, social and political movements for civil rights have ignited interest in the politics of identity, especially those tied to movements for racial justice, women’s rights, and LGBT rights. These movements have in turn informed scholarly practice, not least by prompting the formation of new academic fields, such as Women’s Studies and African American studies, and new forms of analysis, such as intersectionality, critical race theory, and feminist and queer theory. These movements have transformed how scholars of religion in colonial North America and the United States approach intersections of race, gender, and sexuality. From the colonial period to the present, these discourses of difference have shaped religious practice and belief. Religion has likewise shaped how people understand race, gender, and sexuality. The way that most people in the United States think about identity, especially in terms of race, gender, or sexuality, has a longer history forged out of encounters among European Christians, Native Americans, and people of African descent in the colonial world. European Christians brought with them a number of assumptions about the connection between civilization and Christian ideals of gender and sexuality. Many saw their role in the Americas as one of Christianization, a process that included not only religious but also sexual and cultural conversion, as these went hand in hand. Assumptions about religion and sexuality proved central to how European colonists understood the people they encountered as “heathens” or “pagans.” Religion likewise informed how they interpreted the enslavement of Africans, which was often justified through theological readings of the Bible. Native Americans and African Americans also drew upon religion to understand and to resist the violence of European colonialism and enslavement. In the modern United States, languages of religion, race, gender, and sexuality continue to inform one another as they define the boundaries of normative “modernity,” including the role of religion in politics and the relationship between religious versus secular arguments about race, gender, and sexuality.
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License
Copyright Oxford University Press USA, 2016. All Rights Reserved. "Race, Gender, Sexuality, and Religion in North America" by Anthony Petro, February 2017, pp. 1-33, reproduced by permission of Oxford University Press. DOI: 10.1093/acrefore/9780199340378.013.488