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Rodger M. Payne, UNC Asheville associate
professor of religious studies, recently completed work on a new
book entitled "Southern Crossroads: Perspectives on Religion and
Culture." The University Press of Kentucky released the 390-page
book on May 23.
The scholarly text, co-edited by Payne and UNC Wilmington professor
Walter H. Conser Jr., explores the close relationship between
religion and culture of the American South. The editors bring
together experts from a multitude of academic fields to dissect the
intricacies of Southern religion. Topics range from the effect Elvis
Presley had on spirituality in Southern music to the role food plays
in Christian-Jewish relations.
Other topics in the book address cultural identity from both a
historical and modern perspective. The authors examine matters such
as the growing power of women in Southern churches and the religious
overtones of lynching, with its themes of blood sacrifice and
atonement.
Payne is a North Carolina native who returned to the state after 16
years at Louisiana State University, where he served as chair of the
Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies. He completed a
doctorate in American religion from the University of Virginia after
obtaining degrees from UNC Charlotte and Harvard Divinity School.