Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Eric C. Miller
Chapter 1
Reinhold Niebuhr’s Rhetorical Legacy: Democratic Community and
Religious Freedom
Cody Hawley
Chapter 2
Persuasive Ambassadors: The Southern Baptist Commitment to
Religious Freedom for All
Michael Strawser, Matthew Hawkins, and Joe C. Martin
Chapter 3
Differing Definitions: How Conservative Evangelicals and Mainline
Protestants Frame Freedom
Stephanie A. Martin
Chapter 4
Negotiating Religious Freedom in US Catholic Responses to Vaccine
Science
Miles C. Coleman
Chapter 5
Freedom for Whom? The Contested Terrain of Religious Freedom for
Muslims in the United States
Adam Smidi and Lara Lengel
Chapter 6
“Not About Discrimination:” Religious Freedom Restoration Acts and
the Question of Intent
Eric C. Miller
Chapter 7
Religious Freedom and the Marketplace
James T. Petre
Chapter 8
Kim Davis vs. the Gay(ze): A Problematic Response to Religious
Freedom Advocates
Sarah Walker
Chapter 9
Evangelized Scandals: Religious Freedom and Cultural Politics at
Wheaton College
Robin Reames
Chapter 10
Environmental Protection and Religious Freedom: The Case of the
Dakota Access Pipeline
Elizabeth A. Petre
Chapter 11
“What Do You Have to Lose?” Donald Trump, Religious Freedom, and
the African American Vote
Andre E. Johnson
Chapter 12
Is Trump Also Among the Fundamentalists? Religious Freedom and the
Fight to Repeal the Johnson Amendment
Jonathan J. Edwards
About the Contributors
Eric C. Miller is assistant professor of communication studies at Bloomsburg University of Pennsylvania.
Miller has collected a number of diverse and useful rhetorical
studies to demonstrate the importance of religious freedom in the
contemporary public imaginary and its representative discourse. It
is a welcome addition to and unique representation of rhetorical
scholarship.
*Steven Goldzwig, Marquette University*
Freedom of religion remains a contentious issue in American public
culture. Across 12 timely chapters, The Rhetoric of Religious
Freedom in the United States illustrates the myriad of ways in
which the concept of religious freedom becomes negotiated in
political, legal, and social spheres. By addressing the issue
through a rhetorical framework, this collection contributes an
important perspective to ongoing controversies and speaks to the
complex negotiation of American values.
*Leslie J. Harris, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee*
The Rhetoric of Religious Freedom in the United Statesis a timely
collection of essays that together highlight the diversity of ways
that religious traditions and political actors speak about
religious freedom. The volume should be of interest to a wide
variety of audiences, including both qualitatively and
quantitatively minded scholars. In a scholarly world in which the
deluge of research makes it all too easy to only pay attention to
one’s own field, this collection of essays by Communication and
Rhetoric scholars serves as a reminder of the importance and
benefits of engaging scholarship from other disciplines.
*Politics and Religion*
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