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After the Wrath of God: AIDS, Sexuality, and American Religion

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"After the Wrath of God is a subtle, discerning analysis of religious responses to AIDS that goes far beyond the usual attention to the Christian Right. Petro brings ecumenical Protestants, Roman Catholics, biomedical officials, and ACT UP protestors into view alongside their evangelical compatriots and in doing so creates a richly polychromatic picture of American religion, sexuality, and moral debate in the wake of the AIDS epidemic."

--Leigh Eric Schmidt, Edward C. Mallinckrodt Distinguished University Professor, Washington University in St. Louis



"The AIDS crisis was not an epoch that we survived. It is a battle that we are still fighting. In this remarkable work of historical intervention Anthony Petro explores the extraordinary religious ferment that accompanied the emergence of AIDS in the United States. Petro shows that when Americans talk about AIDS they are rarely just talking about a scientific problem or a pharmaceutical solution. They are instead offering a sociology of suffering and a plan for spiritual warfare. After the Wrath of God is required reading for anyone interested in the way this powerful religious past will shape our political future."

--Kathryn Lofton, Professor of Religious Studies, American Studies, History and Divinity; Chair, Women's, Gender and Sexuality Studies, Yale University



"Anthony Petro's novel account of the role of American Christianity in the AIDS crisis moves beyond expected narratives of the rise of the right to encompass a diversity of religious responses across the 'long 1980s.' Illuminating and important."

--Margot Canaday, Associate Professor of History, Princeton University

308 pages, Hardcover

First published April 3, 2015

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About the author

Anthony M. Petro

1 book4 followers
Anthony Petro is an assistant professor of religion at Boston University. His first book, After the Wrath of God: AIDS, Sexuality, and American Religion, tells the history of American religious responses to the AIDS crisis in the 1980s and their role in the promotion of a national moral discourse on sex. He is developing a new project that examines the history of American Christian engagement with health and disability policy in the U.S. since the 1950s.

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Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews
Profile Image for Mark.
183 reviews10 followers
July 23, 2015
This book recaps the history of rough relationships between AIDS/HIV, sexuality, religion, and politics. This was a part of history that I lived through -- saw the headlines, knew the broad strokes that were being drawn -- but it was interesting to see the analysis in hindsight, learning about so many of the ways in which it touched culture at all levels. That said, it isn't the most engaging book.

It is quite hard on segments of Christianity, especially conservative, Evangelical, and Catholics for being more than just obstacles, but actively working against science, medicine, and the best interests of society. It does point out examples of some of the exceptions that have come out of faith communities to engage and address the public health problem.

I find it interesting to compare the early rhetoric and attitudes that religion had in regards to AIDS against what these same communities have toward it today. I wonder if there is a lesson there in regards to any number of the polarizing ideologies that engage energies of religious groups today.

(This is based on ARC supplied by the publisher through NetGalley.)
Profile Image for Anna.
140 reviews37 followers
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December 29, 2015
This book explores the political and religious languages of sexual morality, and how they both intertwined and diverged around the AIDS epidemic during the 1980s and early 1990s. While Petro resists a simplistic narrative of right-wing, conservative (and homophobic) religious responses to AIDS, taking care to document more sex-positive responses, the political takeaway of this history is that sexual conservatism won in the face of moral panic and the fear of a newly-recognized and fatal disease. While early responses to the virus ranged across the spectrum of sexual morality, by the turn of the 20th century a conservative sexual ethic of monogamy and marriage had become the primary public health response to AIDS across the globe. Religious responses to AIDS, and their adaptation in the nominally secular realm of public health demonstrates how morality continues to be a central discourse in the debate over who gets to be a sexual citizen. Petro's book is a well-researched contribution to a rapidly-expanding bookshelf of texts exploring the intersection of sexuality and religion in the recent American past.
Profile Image for M- S__.
278 reviews10 followers
June 4, 2015
while this book is definitely informative, it was not as readable or trade-ish as i was expecting it to be. for something so personal and fraught with emotion, i often felt i was just reading lists of who said what when. though an effort was definitely made to present a clear and accurate picture of what the chritian reaction to the AIDS epidemic was and how it transformed the cultural language we used to discuss it, too often it felt like great pains were taken to present more sides than necessary and the argument felt cloudy.
Profile Image for Grant Showalter-Swanson.
129 reviews3 followers
February 5, 2017
A sobering and important documentation of the historical rise of anti-LGBTQ and anti-abortion rhetoric within the American Church morphing into a conservative moral political voting block. We reap the toxic fruits of this politicized American Christianity today under the oppressive Trump regime.
Profile Image for E..
Author 1 book20 followers
July 25, 2017
This is one of the best written non-fiction books I've read. This is the author's first book, so I look forward to reading what he writes in the future. According to his bio at Boston University his next two book projects look equally as interesting.

This book is about the religious rhetoric used during the early years of the AIDS crisis and how that rhetoric shaped public policy. This is a fascinating study exploring how left, right, and center developed moral language to grapple with the crisis. The study refutes any reductionistic notions of religious conservatives versus secular leftists.

The final two chapters discuss Cardinal O'Connor and ACT UP's confrontation of him. Reading those chapters made me very angry at the Cardinal.

In the final section the author explores how AIDS and gay activists developed their own religious and moral language, but he left me wanting more. I hope that comes in subsequent books.

Also, while he does treat of progressive Christian responses, they don't get as much discussion as conservative responses. This is probably because conservative responses dominated much of the public health debates at the time.

Petro is a keen intellect and engaging writer.
January 9, 2020
Petro does a fantastic job detailing the religious responses to the AIDS epidemic in the United States. In particular, he complicates the commonly held belief that such responses came only from conservative religious actors, showing how religion motivated supporters of gay rights and humanitarian efforts throughout the crisis. It’s a wonderfully written book that draws on fantastic sources throughout. The afterword was especially fascinating to me. Petro connects the effort to combat AIDS to the creation of a new, conservative sexual ethic that prizes monogamous relationships as a way to both prove maturity and end the spread of AIDS. It’s a fascinating commentary embedded in a truly wonderful book.
Profile Image for Lucy.
95 reviews1 follower
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April 9, 2021
read this for a school final project on american religious bodies during the AIDS crisis, so it was very helpful to my research, but I'm not sure I would recommend this to just someone wanting to get an overview of the crisis. It has a very specific focus and reads much more like an academic journal than many other nonfiction books, which works for what it's trying to be, but is why I wouldn't say it's any ~required reading~ or vital text in the literature on AIDS generally. My only real complaint is that I wished it would have touched on non-Christian religions more and had more to say about religious groups that aren't mostly white/led by white people (such as Black Churches).
Profile Image for Kristen.
43 reviews18 followers
February 12, 2017
Historical recollection of the AIDS crisis and its underlying tie in religion
Profile Image for Melanie.
723 reviews40 followers
July 7, 2015
"After the Wrath of God argues that through the AIDS epidemic, American Christians helped build a national movement for sexual reform, one that sought to correct the purported moral declension witnessed in the 1960s and 1970s. If AIDS did not spark the creation of this moral rhetoric, it did quicken efforts to advance a larger moral agenda regarding sex. This new program succeeded precisely because it denied that AIDS was God’s wrath on homosexuals. It suggested instead that the epidemic provided divine evidence for God’s sexual morality. Christian or not, and for better or for worse, we live with that morality today" (p.198).
Profile Image for John.
497 reviews3 followers
August 14, 2015
This is a must read for anyone who went through the Reagan Years of the 80's. Petro gives an in depth look how US Government policy was influenced by the conservative religious right and setting a moral agenda in handling the AIDS crisis.
Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews

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