New Collection Examines the Lasting Effects of Purity Culture

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UCSB
By Debra Herrick, UCSB

In a new edited collection, UC Santa Barbara writing scholar Victoria Houser examines the lasting cultural and personal impact of evangelical purity culture.

In “Purity Culture, Bodies, and Beliefs: Stories of Religious Trauma” (Penn State University Press, 2026), Houser and co-editor Mari Ramler bring together contributors whose essays explore how high-control religious environments shape understandings of sexuality, gender, race, disability and bodily autonomy. Through critical autoethnography and personal narrative, the collection reframes religious trauma not only as a theological or psychological issue, but as an embodied experience.

“The book is really people’s stories about their experiences within purity culture and other high-control religious environments, and the ways that they are navigating that now as adults,” said Houser, an assistant teaching professor in UCSB’s Writing Program. 

Broadly defined, purity culture emerged from the abstinence-only education movement of the 1990s and early 2000s and was closely tied to evangelical Christian teachings about sex and marriage. Organizations such as True Love Waits and Silver Ring Thing encouraged young people to abstain from sex until marriage, often promising emotional fulfillment and stronger relationships in return. 

“The purpose of it, as articulated by these religious movements, was to create a space that encouraged young adults to not have sex until they got married,” Houser said. “But the promise was always that they would end up having really amazing sex inside of their heterosexual marriages.” 

Houser’s research is also informed by her own experience growing up inside the Institute in Basic Life Principles, the religious organization associated with the Duggar family of the reality television series “19 Kids and Counting.” Raised in rural Alaska and homeschooled within the movement, she was immersed in a particularly strict version of purity culture from a young age. 

“I was not ever allowed to be alone with a member of the opposite sex,” she said. 

Victoria Houser smiles in a field
Victoria Houser researches and writes about Evangelical purity culture, a passion that grew from her experiences being raised within a religious cult that was a part of the purity movement. (courtesy photo)
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