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In the history of the evangelical Christian family movement, one figure stands tall above the rest: a children's psychologist from Louisiana named James Dobson. For three decades, Dobson built up his media empire, Focus on the Family, on the back of his plain-spoken traditionalist approach to child rearing. Then, as the broader cultural tide shifted in favor of normalizing homosexual relationships, he got kicked out. This week, Josh and June take a look at why Dobson's approach resonated with so many parents in the 1970s, 80s and 90s, how his work institutionalized the natalist project among evangelical Christians, and how religious fundamentalism, no matter how polite, corrodes a healthy society.
SUPPLEMENTAL LISTENING:
EPISODE ART: Focus on the Family press photo of James Dobson c. 2007
SOURCES:
AUDIO CLIPS:
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By Josh Boerman & June Sternbach4.5
263263 ratings
In the history of the evangelical Christian family movement, one figure stands tall above the rest: a children's psychologist from Louisiana named James Dobson. For three decades, Dobson built up his media empire, Focus on the Family, on the back of his plain-spoken traditionalist approach to child rearing. Then, as the broader cultural tide shifted in favor of normalizing homosexual relationships, he got kicked out. This week, Josh and June take a look at why Dobson's approach resonated with so many parents in the 1970s, 80s and 90s, how his work institutionalized the natalist project among evangelical Christians, and how religious fundamentalism, no matter how polite, corrodes a healthy society.
SUPPLEMENTAL LISTENING:
EPISODE ART: Focus on the Family press photo of James Dobson c. 2007
SOURCES:
AUDIO CLIPS:
FOLLOW THE SHOW:
FOLLOW JOSH:
FOLLOW JUNE:

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