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In his 2020 presidential plenary at the Modern Language Association annual convention, Simon Gikandi spoke about “Being Human” and later published his thoughts in PMLA with the title, “Literature and the Right to be Human.” While at the same time, many scholars of Christianity and literature at religious and secular institutions alike are continually readjusting as their administrations attempt to adopt public-relations and sometimes branded forms of critical race theory. Recent regional meetings of the Conference on Christianity & Literature have tried to get ahead of such institutional business by taking event themes such as “Christianity, Race, and Justice” and “Literary Geographies –Space, Place, and Environments.” The Ohio State University Press, Bloomsbury Publishing, and Notre Dame University Press are among those publishers that have launched popular academic book series devoted to the study of religion and literature. [...]literature-heavy Great Books programs have become popular general education alternatives especially at Christian universities. [...]in an important way, the turn toward discovering religion in the structure of faith and art aligns with a similar phenomenological way of reading in postcolonialism, ethnic studies, speculative fiction, and ethics, where imagination is sometimes viewed as a form of rebellion or an expression of freedom.