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  1. Young Women, Sexuality and Protestant Church Community: Oppression or Empowerment?Sonya Sharma - 2008 - European Journal of Women's Studies 15 (4):345-359.
    Although Christianity's clout on sexuality has generally declined in Britain due to secularization, contemporary conservative Protestantism continues to encourage a conventional construction of sexuality — sex is only for the context of heterosexual marriage. Qualitative interviews with 26 heterosexual women and two lesbian women on how their Protestant church involvement impacted their sexuality revealed the pervasive discourse of a marital-confined sexuality and participants' sense of `accountability' to the group for carrying this out. Such accountability can result in a repressed sexuality (...)
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  • Religion and Eating Disorders: Towards Understanding a Neglected Perspective.Joanne Woolway Grenfell - 2006 - Feminist Theology 14 (3):367-387.
    This article seeks to explore a neglected perspective in pastoral theology: namely that of the influence of conservative family culture and church practice on the spiritual, emotional, and physical development of young Christian women, particularly in the area of disordered eating patterns and negative self-image. It shows the ways in which hidden tensions, particularly within somewhat marginal Christian communities, or for groups which seek to define themselves strongly against prevailing secular cultural norms, can play themselves out in the inner conflicts (...)
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  • Evangelical and Catholic Masculinities in Two Fatherhood Ministries.Joseph Gelfer - 2010 - Feminist Theology 19 (1):36-53.
    In men’s ministries it is possible to distinguish between evangelical and Catholic masculinities: the former being more traditional, the latter somewhat ‘softer.’ This paper pursues these differing masculine performances within a discourse of fatherhood in two fatherhood ministries: Dad the Family Shepherd and Fathers for Good. On the whole, the fatherhood ministries repeat the evangelical and Catholic masculinities of regular men’s ministries via the treatment of male headship, the politics of gender and sexuality, and the use of sport as a (...)
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  • The discourse of divorce in conservative Christian sermons.Valerie Hobbs - 2019 - Critical Discourse Studies 17 (2):193-210.
    ABSTRACTWork on religious discourse is still limited and linguistic research on preaching scarce. The present study makes explicit the ways that pastors in the conservative Protestant Christian chu...
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