Amy D. McDowell is Associate Professor of Sociology in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at the University of Mississippi.
""McDowell deftly illustrates how a friendly, casual church strives to ""Welcome Everyone!"" while silencing the experiences of most. An ethos of small-talk prevents conflict while members worship a ""God of order"" who is okay with jeans but prioritizes the social power of those already at the top. An ethnographic masterpiece."" - Dawne Moon, Marquette University ""Understanding evangelical political culture has never been more important, and this book is a vital step in that direction. Deeply researched and beautifully written – sociologists will admire McDowell's skill, and every reader will benefit from her insight."" - Nancy T. Ammerman, author of Bible Believers: Fundamentalists in the Modern World ""A tour de force of ethnographic insight. McDowell has produced that rare scholarly achievement: a book that fundamentally reorients how we understand religious communities and political formation. By documenting the intricate interactional work of achieving sameness – the strategic silences, the conversational redirections – Whispers illuminates mechanisms that profoundly reshape our grasp of American politics. Invaluable for scholars, students, journalists, and anyone seeking to understand the deeper dynamics shaping contemporary political life."" - Mikael Klintman, Professor of Sociology, Lund University, Sweden