Creating Urban Evangelicalism: Youth Ministry, Moral Boundaries, and Social Diversity
by Rhys H. Williams, University of Cincinnati
& R. Stephen Warner, University of Illinois at Chicago
May 2001
Presented to: Evangelicals and Political and Civic Engagement Conference, sponsored by the Ethics and Public Policy Center, Cape Elizabeth, Maine, June 2001
Part IV
REFERENCES
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The Culture of Culture Industries: Religion, Art and Business in the Evangelical Protestant Music Industry. Ph.D. diss. Department of Sociology, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale.
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Why Strict Churches Are Strong. Pp. 269- 291 in Sacred Companies, N.J. Demerath et al, eds. New York: Oxford University Press.
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Warner, R. Stephen. 1994.
The Place of the Congregation in the American Religious Configuration. Pp. 54-99 in New Perspectives in the Study of Congregations, J. Wind and J. Lewis, eds. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Warner, R. Stephen and Elise Martel. 1998.
Catholicism is to Islam as Velcro is to Teflon: Religion and Ethnic Culture Among Second Generation Latina and Muslim Women College Students. Paper presented to the Midwest Sociological Society, Kansas City.
Williams, Rhys H. (ed.) 1997.
Cultural Wars in American Politics: Critical Reviews of a Popular Myth. (Hawthorne, NY: Aldine de Gruyter).
Williams, Rhys H., Janet Armitage and Timothy J. Kubal. 2000
College Students and Religion: Changing Meanings and Organizational Attachments Paper presented to Society for the Scientific Study of Religion, Houston, October.
Williams, Rhys H. and Gira Vashi. 2001.
Hijab and American Muslim Women: Creating Space for Autonomous Selves. Paper presented to the Midwest Sociological Society, St. Louis, April.
Go back: Part I
Go back: Part II
Go back: Part III
Islam is to Catholicism as Teflon is to Velcro: Theorizing Ambivalence About Religion and Ethnic Culture Among Second Generation Muslim Women and Latina College Students
Hijab and American Muslim Women: Creating the Space for Autonomous Selves
Creating Urban Evangelicalism: Youth Ministry, Moral Boundaries, and Social Diversity
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