Residual and Resurgent Protestantism in the American Media (and Political) Imaginary

Authors

  • Stewart M. Hoover Department of Media Studies University of Colorado Boulder

Keywords:

religion, media, Protestantism, politics, American cultural studies, historicism

Abstract

 This essay seeks to introduce more substantive attention to religion into the field of media studies. It argues that religion persists in culture and politics, as demonstrated by political upheavals in the North Atlantic West, and that media scholarship lacks critical theoretical and conceptual resources to address that fact. The essay calls for careful historicism and, as a heuristic, interrogates American Protestantism as a cultural, political, and media project. It references emerging scholarships to suggest ways that Protestantism is expressed as a politics in relation to the public and domestic spheres.

Author Biography

Stewart M. Hoover, Department of Media Studies University of Colorado Boulder

Professor of Media Studies and Religious Studies at the University of Colorado at Boulder, where he directs the Center for Media, Religion, and Culture.  He is an internationally-recognized expert on media and religion.  He is author co-author or editor of ten books, including Media, Home, and Family, and Religion in the Media Age, and Does God Make the Man: Media, Religion, and the Crisis of Masculinity, co-authored with Curtis Coats, and the edited volume, The Media and Religious Authority.

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Published

2017-07-14

Issue

Section

Articles