Lifeboat foundation5/1/2023 The French sailor, the only man aboard the yacht, had been on his way to Bangor from Arklow and called via radio for help. The French vessel was the first to require assistance, shortly before midday, after running aground on rocks at Ballyferris point. View Web Publication.Īccess Dr.Donaghadee rescue teams were called into action twice on Thursday, as the assisted both a French and German yacht that had run into difficulties. In Anthropology: Oxford University Press. (Published online 2020) “Lifeboat Theology: White evangelicalism, apocalyptic chronotopes, and environmental politics” Ethnos: Journal of Anthropology.Ģ020 “Racializing misogyny: Sexuality and gender in the new online white nationalism,” Feminist Anthropology 1.2: 176-183.Ģ020 “Christian nationalism and LGBTQ Structural Violence in the United States,” Journal of Religion and Violence, 7.3: 278-302.Ģ020 “White Sexual Politics: The Patriarchal Family in White Nationalism and the Religious Right,” Transforming Anthropology, 28.1: 58-73.Ģ020 “Whither Whiteness and Religion: Implications for theology and the study of religion,” co-authored with Rachel Schneider, Journal of the American Academy of Religion, 88.1: 175–199.Ģ018 “Training the Porous Body: Evangelicals and the Ex-Gay Movement,” American Anthropologist, 120.4: 647-658.Ģ015 “Feminist Ethnography in Cyberspace: Imagining Families in the Cloud,” Sex Roles: A Journal of Research, 73.3: 113-124.Ģ006 “The Apartheid Conscience: Gender, Race, and Re-imagining the White Nation in Cyberspace,” Ethnic Studies Review, 29.2: 20-45.ījork-James, Sophie. Rutgers University Press.Ģ020 Beyond Populism: Angry Politics and the Twilight of Neoliberalism, edited with Jeff Maskovsky, West Virginia University Press. Bjork-James’ publications or click on her website for publications and more.Ģ021 The Divine Institution: White Evangelicalism’s Politics of the Family. The other project explores contemporary pro-life activism and the intersection of abortion politics and environmental politics. One explores anti-racist strategies challenging the white nationalist movement in the Northwestern United States. She is currently developing two projects. She is the author of The Divine Institution: White Evangelicalism’s Politics of the Family(Rutgers University Press, 2021) which provides an ethnographic account of how a theology of the family came to dominate a white evangelical tradition in the post-Civil Rights movement United States, providing a theological corollary to Religious Right politics. She is the co-editor of Beyond Populism: Angry Politics and the Twilight of Neoliberalism(West Virginia University Press, 2020). Her work has appeared on the NBC Nightly News, NPR’s All Things Considered, BBC Radio 4’s Today, and in the New York Times. Sophie Bjork-James has engaged in long-term research on both the US-based Religious Right and the white nationalist movement. Race and racism, evangelicalism, reproductive politics, white nationalism, hate crimes Sophie Bjork-James Assistant Professor of Anthropology (Race and racism, evangelicalism, reproductive politics)
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