'Copyrighting God explores how copyright law is crucially involved in constructing and maintaining the sacredness of religious texts and the aura of charismatic leaders, framing a church’s relationship with internal and external critics, and maintaining the boundaries and identity of new religious communities. Even more surprising, some of the specific challenges that religions have posed to intellectual property have been influential to its further articulation. Superbly researched and subtly argued through copious printed and archival sources, Copyrighting God has many gems to offer to many disciplines, from religious studies to law, media studies, American studies and history, and cultural studies. Ventimiglia’s gift to communicate complex arguments in crystal-clear prose will gain this book many admirers, from the classroom to the public sphere.'
Mario Biagioli - Distinguished Professor, University of California, Davis
'Focusing on disputes around intellectual property, Ventimiglia demonstrates how religious communities rely on secular law to define and protect their religious knowledge. I can’t imagine a more innovative, more timely, or more urgently needed investigation of the dynamics between law, religion, publishing, and technology. Ventimiglia’s book makes a powerful contribution to our understanding of how contemporary religion takes shape.'
Ari Y. Kelman - Jim Joseph Professor of Education and Jewish StudiesStanford University Graduate School of Education
'This exciting book asks scholars of religion to identify intellectual property law as an important site for organizing - and controlling - religious practice. Through rich analysis of legal disputes, the author considers how the commercial management of property defines modern religious experience. A powerful and necessary new argument.'
Kathryn Lofton - Yale University, Connecticut
'This is an original, engaging, and thoughtful book that will be of interest to anyone seeking to gain a deeper understanding of an important but neglected area of the history of copyright law, as well as the complex relationship between religion and law in the United States. Through careful socio-legal analysis and archival research, the author reveals the legal resourcefulness that American religious leaders and organizations have employed in asserting ownership over sacred and prophetic texts. At the same time he also demonstrates that a greater dependence on the law might damage religious credibility and vice-versa.'
Brad Sherman - University of Queensland
'Undergraduate and advanced readers of this unique and fascinating study will gain a renewed appreciation for the deep entanglement of religion and the law, and a new vantage through which to study the history of NRMs in the US.'
Cody Musselman
Source: Reading Religion
‘This book marks an exciting addition to scholarship on religion, law, and media, and will appeal to anyone interested in the organization and regulation of American religious life.’
Isaac Weiner
Source: Journal Religious Studies Review