2020-2021
鈥淩eckoning with the Legacy of White Supremacy in American Christianity:鈥 A Conversation with Robert P. Jones
A conversation with CEO and founder of Public Religion Research Institute (PRRI), Robert P. Jones
Tuesday, October 27, 2020 at 6 pm on Zoom
Scholar Robert P. Jones joined Professor of Religious Studies Toddie Peters, Associate Professor of Psychology Buffie Longmire-Avital and Assistant Professor of Political Science and Policy Studies Damion Blake for a discussion about the roots of white supremacy in American Christianity.
The conversation was based on Jones鈥 most recent book,聽White Too Long: The Legacy of White Supremacy in American Christianity. Jones is the founder and CEO of the聽Public Religion Research Institute, a nonprofit, nonpartisan research firm that uses polling and other methods to study the intersection of religion, culture and public policy in the United States.聽The 2020 book explores three major sources to understand racism in American Christianity: history, public opinion data collected by his polling firm, and memoir-style writing about his own personal reckoning with white supremacy. He argued that the American Christian Church has not just been complacent or complicit regarding white supremacy, but responsible for creating and sustaining these systems.
A recording of the discussion is available for viewing聽.
鈥淩eligion at the Borders鈥- 2021 CSRCS Annual Symposium
February 11-13, 2021
Borders demarcate edges, and edges can be powerful places from which to understand, undermine, or underscore the stability of centers. Geographical borders, for example, may serve to delineate religious identities, while recitations, practices, and rituals may define the boundaries of belonging within religious communities. Borders might also separate orthodoxy from heterodoxy, serve as transitional or liminal spaces, or provide sites for critiquing mainstream ideas or identities. Borders are also bridges, that is, areas where people, cultures, genders, families, economies, and religious traditions meet and meld. An examination of 鈥淩eligion on the Borders鈥 offers the opportunity to expand and redefine the intersections of religion, society, and culture across time and space. We invite scholars to consider the ways that religion on or at the border(s) can advance our understanding of tradition, identity, practice, as well as the built, material, and intellectual culture of religion.
Keynote address from Leah Sarat (Arizona State University): 鈥淭he Terror of 鈥楽afety:鈥 Christianity, Immigrant Policing, and Detention at the Nation鈥檚 Edge鈥
Thursday, February 11, 2021 at 5:45 pm
Drawing upon a decade of experience navigating the boundaries between academic and activist spaces in Arizona, Sarat will highlight the stories of two Christian leaders whose lives have been closely impacted by the private, for-profit immigrant detention industry in the state: an asylum-seeker from El Salvador who emerged as a peer faith healer during four years at Arizona鈥檚 Eloy Detention Center, and the former national Director of Chaplaincy for CoreCivic, the company that profited from her time behind bars. While these stories provide insight onto the commodification of human beings that contributes to immigrant policing in borderlands, they also offer a window onto the intersection of Christianity with broader debates about safety, fear, liberation, healing, and personhood within the U.S. carceral landscape. Dr. Sarat is author of聽聽(NYU Press, November 2013).
Lens on the Border photo exhibit
Photo exhibit by the Sierra Club on display throughout the Academic Village during the month of February
In conjunction with the 2021 Religion at the Borders symposium, we are honored to be hosting the Sierra Club鈥檚 photography exhibit,聽鈥淟ens on the Border.鈥澛燩hotographs and artist information is hung in the lobbies and hallways of the buildings in the Academic Village.
A brief walk-through video by 黑料不打烊 student Sarah Escoria is available聽.
Jack Jenkins of Religion News Service speaking to Religion and Media Communications class
Reporter Jack Jenkins to speak during Professor Anthony Hatcher鈥檚 Religion and Media class

Wednesday, February 10, 2021 at 2 pm
Jack Jenkins, a reporter and analyst for Religion News Service, visited Anthony Hatcher’s Religion and Media course to talk about his own journey into religion reporting and his ongoing work on the religious left in the U.S. He recently published his book, , discussing the intersection of religion and progressive politics.
Religion Trending: 鈥淐hristian White Supremacists and Religion in Neo-Fascist Groups鈥
Wednesday, March 3, 2021 at 5:15 pm
Religion Trending is an informal gathering of faculty and staff to discuss religion-related topics that are trending in the news. Organized in an ad hoc manner in response to pressing issues of import, these events draw on-campus expertise to help faculty and staff unpack topics that may be the subject of discussion in our classrooms, residence halls, and offices. In previous years these gathers having taken place at Oak House. Due to COVID-19, the CSRCS unveiled “Religion Trending: Virtual Edition” using Zoom. The online format allowed for a larger audience, facilitated recording and archiving for future use, and enabled outside guest speakers to more easily contribute to the conversation. Religion Trending: Virtual Edition discussions on the following topics were held in the Fall semester, January Term, and Spring semester; all are available on the .
Seeking to further deepen the discussion on religion and right-wing extremism, Megan Squire (Computer Science) and guest speaker Joan Braune (Philosophy, Gonzaga University) gave a talk examining the religious (and anti-religious) views of far right extremist groups, ranging from the Christian Identity movement to millenarian accelerationists.
Annual Geography Lecture: Race, Religion, and Food with Priscilla McCutcheon
Friday, March 26, 2021 at 2 pm
This lecture from Priscilla McCutcheon from the University of Kentucky Geography Department examined Black liberation theology as a framework to understand how some Black people might find freedom through food and agriculture. The talk discussed key connections between Black liberation, food and agriculture, paying specific attention to the importance of 鈥渞evolution鈥 and 鈥渞econciliation鈥 in Black liberation, and why an attention to Black liberation theology is called for in our present moment when food injustice, and racial and social injustices continue to collide.
Religion Trending: 鈥淪tar Wars鈥
Tuesday, May 4, 2021 at 5:15 pm
Associate Chaplain Shane Atkinson, campus Imam and resident Star Wars expert, led this virtual discussion on the intersection of Star Wars and Islam.