Submitted to Program Units |
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1: History of Christianity Unit and Religion in Europe Unit |
Abstract for Online Program Book (maximum 150 words)
This panel brings together three different perspectives on violence in the history of Christianity in response to the AAR Presidential call to understand violence in relation to "the hierarchical understanding of beings and valuation of their lives." Papers examine Christian and Jewish accounts of violence during the First Crusade (1096-1099); the political thought and theology of Martin Luther in response to the German Peasants’ War (1524-1525); and patterns of institutionalized violence in contemporary American Evangelicalism. Looking at narratives and structures that enforced otherness of religious identity, class, gender, and sexuality will enable a deep, comparative investigation of continuity and change in the reifying of boundaries between the centers and peripheries of the Christian world.
Papers
- The Rhineland Massacres and Religious Violence During the First Crusade
- Offering "an Opportunity to Come to Terms" before Taking the Sword. Luther on Princes, Peasants, and Peace.
- Celibate Gay Christians, Tradwives, and Christian Nationalists: The Discursive Regime of Mandatory Heterosexuality in Contemporary American Evangelicalism