Real name: 

Primary Discipline

Primary Discipline: 

  • Social SciencesSociologyCultural sociology

Further Specification: 

Sociology of Religion
Secondary Discipline

Secondary Discipline: 

  • Humanities

Further Specification: 

Feminist Religious Studies

Biography: 

Elizabeth M. Freese, PhD is a sociologist of religion focused on the Reproductive Justice movement and serving as Scholar-in-Residence with SACReD (Spiritual Alliance of Communities for Reproductive Dignity) to support its education and advocacy programs. In her public scholarship, Freese contributes to an understanding of the interactions between Christianity and the politics of reproduction. Her essays have been featured in Salon, Religious Dispatches, Common Dreams, Feminism and Religion, Justice Unbound, and Vanderbilt Divinity School’s Interventions forum, and she has participated in webinar panels with Drew University’s Forum on Religion and Global Heath, Women’s March, RCRC, and Vanderbilt Divinity School’s Program in Religion and Justice. Freese’s research interrogates dynamics between Christian religious constructions in biblical myth and Eucharist ritual, on the one hand, and, on the other, intersectional, feminist justice concerns. Recent publications include “What Grows in the Wilderness?: Feminist and Womanist Liturgical Offerings in a Time of Social Interregnum”(2023) and “Toward Eve’s Exodus: Un-Misrecognizing Androcentric Reproductive Labor Ideology in Christian Right Rhetoric and Genesis 1-3” (2024). She is currently working on a book, Constructing Women: A Feminist Analysis of Reproductive Labor Ideology in Christian Myth and Ritual. Freese earned a PhD in Sociology of Religion with a Women’s Studies Concentration at Drew University.

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