"Impressively crafted and imaginatively structured, this is a cutting-edge collection of essays on the entwining of American religion and empire. From Katharine Gerbner's work on eighteenth-century legal codes regulating slave religion and suppressing slave rebellion through Lucia Hulsether's consideration of the ongoing commodification of late-capitalist dissent, the collection's offerings are rich, far ranging, and provocative." - Leigh Eric Schmidt, Edward C. Mallinckrodt Distinguished University Professor, Washington University in Saint Louis "An excellent volume that includes some of the very best scholars in the field of American religions. Each chapter addresses a different aspect of religion and empire, whose groundbreaking connections and contestation form an invaluable contribution to the field." - Chad Seales, Brian F. Bolton Distinguished Professor in Secular Studies, the University of Texas at Austin "This anthology is the opening salvo to how we could rethink the role of religion in American diplomatic history. The gap has been bridged between American foreign relations history and religion; we are now on the other side. Religion and US Empire charts a way forward in what is increasingly becoming an important field of American history." (H-Net Reviews) "This volume provides a fresh historical-critical account of how religion structured, enabled, and challenged U.S. imperialism, serving as an important read for scholars of American religious history." (Journal of Presbyterian History)