
@article{ref1,
title="Religion, Flesh, and Blood: Re-creating Religious Culture in the Context of HIV/AIDS",
journal="Sociology of religion",
year="2006",
author="Leong, Pamela",
volume="67",
number="3",
pages="295-311",
abstract="This ethnography of an African-American AIDS ministry in Los Angeles aims to provide insight as to why this congregation is able to: transcend constraints imposed by traditional religious institutions; address the health, spiritual, and social needs of its parishioners without losing sight of its religious traditions; and, at all times, maintain an AIDS-activist orientation. The focus is on the congregation's distinct religious-therapeutic culture. Through processes of ideological reconstruction, the congregation enables a consonance between religious traditions and its members' unique identities. The reworking of dominant Christian ideology is exemplified in how the pastor has re-framed the divine, in how he has incorporated psycho-therapeutic elements into religious rituals, in his method of exegesis, and in how he has reworked the sacred-profane divide. But as a separatist religious organization, this congregation also offers alternative and oppositional religious and social cultures, providing a familiar and empowering site for its members<p />",
language="",
issn="1069-4404",
doi="10.1093/socrel/67.3.295",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/socrel/67.3.295"
}