R. Marie Griffith
Born Again Bodies
Flesh and Spirit in American Christianity
337 pages, 6 x 9 inches, 20 b/w photographs
October 2004, Available worldwide
Categories: Religion; Christianity; History of Food; Cultural Anthropology
October 2004, Available worldwide
Categories: Religion; Christianity; History of Food; Cultural Anthropology
Downloadable eBook version available:
Adobe E-Reader at ebooks.com, $15.95
Adobe E-Reader at ebooks.com, $15.95
"Marie Griffith's marvelous book will make a lot of people think twice. She has done what many historians aspire to do but few actually manage to accomplish: make this world a more humane place."—Grant Wacker, Books & Culture: a Christian Review
"Griffith provides no easy answers, but she does offer the most complex and comprehensive view of these historical trajectories to date."—Amy Frykholm, Christian Century
"Engaging and persuasive. . . .Offers readers a promising new direction in the study of American religion. Highly recommended."—S. McCloud, Choice
"Excellent . . . . Griffith offers fascinating analyses of the writing and work of dozens of both famous and completely unknown practitioners."—Publishers Weekly
"Griffith provides no easy answers, but she does offer the most complex and comprehensive view of these historical trajectories to date."—Amy Frykholm, Christian Century
"Engaging and persuasive. . . .Offers readers a promising new direction in the study of American religion. Highly recommended."—S. McCloud, Choice
"Excellent . . . . Griffith offers fascinating analyses of the writing and work of dozens of both famous and completely unknown practitioners."—Publishers Weekly
"This is a wonderful book, well-conceptualized, written with style and wit, and impressive for its ambition, reach and achievement. R. Marie Griffith brings to the scene learning, theoretical subtlety, critical acumen, historical skill, and humane sensibility. She has emerged as one of the most sophisticated and insightful scholars of the Christian body in any period of Christian history."—Robert Orsi, Harvard University
"Born Again Bodies is extraordinary. It uncovers an arena of knowledge never before looked at with this level of critical attention when examining American religious culture; Griffith's strength is that she looks across the 'evangelical' denominations. Her work is elegant and truly original."—Sander L. Gilman, author of Difference and Pathology and Jewish Frontiers
"Born Again Bodies is extraordinary. It uncovers an arena of knowledge never before looked at with this level of critical attention when examining American religious culture; Griffith's strength is that she looks across the 'evangelical' denominations. Her work is elegant and truly original."—Sander L. Gilman, author of Difference and Pathology and Jewish Frontiers
"Fat People Don't Go to Heaven!" screamed a headline in the tabloid Globe in November 2000. The story recounted the success of the Weigh Down Workshop, the nation's largest Christian diet corporation and the subject of extensive press coverage from Larry King Live to the New Yorker. In the United States today, hundreds of thousands of people are making diet a religious duty by enrolling in Christian diet programs and reading Christian diet literature like What Would Jesus Eat? and Fit for God. Written with style and wit, far ranging in its implications, and rich with the stories of real people, Born Again Bodies launches a provocative yet sensitive investigation into Christian fitness and diet culture. Looking closely at both the religious roots of this movement and its present-day incarnations, R. Marie Griffith vividly analyzes Christianity's intricate role in America's obsession with the body, diet, and fitness.
As she traces the underpinning of modern-day beauty and slimness ideals—as well as the bigotry against people who are overweight—Griffith links seemingly disparate groups in American history including seventeenth-century New England Puritans, Progressive Era New Thought adherents, and late-twentieth-century evangelical diet preachers.
As she traces the underpinning of modern-day beauty and slimness ideals—as well as the bigotry against people who are overweight—Griffith links seemingly disparate groups in American history including seventeenth-century New England Puritans, Progressive Era New Thought adherents, and late-twentieth-century evangelical diet preachers.
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Christian America? What Evangelicals Really Want, by Christian Smith
Contested Lives: The Abortion Debate in an American Community, Updated edition, by Faye D. Ginsburg
Reinventing American Protestantism: Christianity in the New Millennium, by Donald E. Miller
Straight to Jesus: Sexual and Christian Conversions in the Ex-Gay Movement, by Tanya Erzen
Unsettled Minds: Psychology and the American Search for Spiritual Assurance, 1830-1940, by Christopher G. White
Ghosts of Futures Past: Spiritualism and the Cultural Politics of Nineteenth-Century America, by Molly McGarry












