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Throughout history, determined individuals have appropriated and
reconstructed rhetorical and religious resources to create
effective arguments. In the process, they have remade both
themselves and their communities. This edited volume offers notable
examples of these reconstructions, ranging from the formation of
Christianity to questions about the relationship of religious and
academic ways of knowing.
The initial chapters explore historic challenges to Christian
doctrines and gender roles. Contributors examine Mormon women's
campaigns for the recognition of their sect, women's suffrage, and
the statehood of Utah; the Seventh-day Adventist challenge to the
mainstream designation of Sunday as the Sabbath; a female minister
who confronted the gendered tenets of early Methodism and created
her own sacred spaces; women who, across three centuries, fashioned
an apostolic voice of humble authority rooted in spiritual
conversion; and members of the Woman's Foreign Missionary Society
of the Methodist Episcopal Church, who redefined notions of women's
intellectual capacity and appropriate fields for work from the
Civil War through World War II.
Considering contemporary learning environments, other contributors
explore resources that can help faculty and students of composition
and rhetoric consider more fully the relations of religion and
academic work. These contributors call upon the work of
theologians, philosophers, and biblical scholars to propose
strategies for building trust through communication.
The final chapters examine the writings of Apostle Paul and his
use of Jewish forms of argumentation and provide an overarching
discussion of how the Christian tradition has resisted rhetorical
renovation, and in the process, missed opportunities to renovate
spiritual belief.
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