
1.
Greenberg, David Brett.
Highway Religion: Truckstop Chapels, Evangelism, and Lived Religion on the Road.
Degree: BA, Religion, 2011, Oberlin College Honors Theses
► This study examines manifestations of Christian faith found along the highways of…
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▼ This study examines manifestations of Christian faith found along the highways of the United States, particularly in the form of truckstop chapels. Through ethnographic research and social-historical/theoretical analysis, this study seeks to explore the ways in which Evangelical Christianity, when combined with certain cultural and social particulars of the trucking profession, may be markedly re-contextualized, giving rise to distinctive approaches to ministry, worship, and religious life. By identifying widespread and often codified specializations among trucking ministries and examining the ways in which the trucking-specific evangelism of such ministries may be applied and lived out by individual drivers of faith, this study asserts that trucking ministry is a concrete and unique social, cultural, and religious formation, the existence and properties of which allow many drivers to pursue and understand faith and profession in a seamless and unified manner.
Advisors/Committee Members: Swan Tuite, James.
Subjects: American Studies; Religion; Religious History; Transportation
Keywords: Truck driving; Trucking; American Religion; Christianity; Evangelicalism; Truckstop chapels; Lived religion; Religion
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