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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Sara Moslener (Assistant Professor, Assistant Professor, Central Michigan University)Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc Imprint: Oxford University Press Inc Dimensions: Width: 16.00cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 24.10cm Weight: 0.408kg ISBN: 9780199987764ISBN 10: 0199987769 Pages: 232 Publication Date: 09 July 2015 Audience: College/higher education , Undergraduate , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsReviewsIn a welcome addition to a growing body of work on religion and sexuality, Moslener offers a subtle exploration of the subterranean themes that inform evangelical sexual purity campaigns. Arguing that they are not simply a response to the sexual revolution, she deftly connects their rhetoric of therapeutic individualism with longstanding tropes of civilizational decline and immanent apocalypse, thus locating issues of sexual purity at the heart of American culture. --Ann Taves, Professor of Religious Studies, UC Santa Barbara In this fascinating study, Sara Moslener locates contemporary purity movements in a historical framework that highlights moments when American evangelicals have perceived cultural crisis and responded with efforts to promote adolescent sexual purity. Virgin Nation provides a thorough and nuanced examination of American evangelicals' efforts to assert a relationship between sexual immorality and national decline, and place their hopes of salvation on the pure bodies of adolescents. --Amy DeRogatis, Associate Professor of religion and American culture, Michigan State University A useful addition to the growing body of research on Christian sexual politics. Scholars in the field will wish to be aware of Moslener's work. --Library Journal Moslener provides fascinating insights into the initial appearance of moral-purity rhetoric that was used to both support and oppose the burgeoning Victorian feminist movement, and later, to prompt Cold War-era fears of nuclear annihilation . . . an engaging read that provides valuable historical and intellectual context for an important American religious trend. --Publishers Weekly In a welcome addition to a growing body of work on religion and sexuality, Moslener offers a subtle exploration of the subterranean themes that inform evangelical sexual purity campaigns. Arguing that they are not simply a response to the sexual revolution, she deftly connects their rhetoric of therapeutic individualism with longstanding tropes of civilizational decline and immanent apocalypse, thus locating issues of sexual purity at the heart of American culture. --Ann Taves, Professor of Religious Studies, UC Santa Barbara In this fascinating study, Sara Moslener locates contemporary purity movements in a historical framework that highlights moments when American evangelicals have perceived cultural crisis and responded with efforts to promote adolescent sexual purity. Virgin Nation provides a thorough and nuanced examination of American evangelicals' efforts to assert a relationship between sexual immorality and national decline, and place their hopes of salvation on the pure bodies of adolescents. --Amy DeRogatis, Associate Professor of religion and American culture, Michigan State University In a welcome addition to a growing body of work on religion and sexuality, Moslener offers a subtle exploration of the subterranean themes that inform evangelical sexual purity campaigns. Arguing that they are not simply a response to the sexual revolution, she deftly connects their rhetoric of therapeutic individualism with longstanding tropes of civilizational decline and immanent apocalypse, thus locating issues of sexual purity at the heart of American culture. --Ann Taves, Professor of Religious Studies, UC Santa Barbara In this fascinating study, Sara Moslener locates contemporary purity movements in a historical framework that highlights moments when American evangelicals have perceived cultural crisis and responded with efforts to promote adolescent sexual purity. Virgin Nation provides a thorough and nuanced examination of American evangelicals' efforts to assert a relationship between sexual immorality and national decline, and place their hopes of salvation on the pure bodies of adolescents. --Amy DeRogatis, Associate Professor of religion and American culture, Michigan State University A useful addition to the growing body of research on Christian sexual politics. Scholars in the field will wish to be aware of Moslener's work. --Library Journal Author InformationSara Moslener is Assistant Professor of Religion at Central Michigan University. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |