Robert Fuller is a doctoral student in History in the School of Historical, Philosophical, and Religious Studies. Robert is a historian of apocalypticism, fundamentalism, and how religious beliefs have influenced popular attitudes towards environmental science and activism. His forthcoming dissertation examines how and why evangelical attitudes towards the environmental crisis and climate change have shifted dramatically in the decades since 1970.
Courses Taught:
Bachelor of Science, Adolescent Counseling, Baptist Bible College
Master of Arts, History, University of Texas—Arlington
Beyond Secularization: Religion, Science and Technology in Public Life
(Co-Lab hosted by the ASU Center for the Study of Religion and Pace)
[Under contract] "Religion and Environmentalism," chapter in forthcoming The Routledge History of Religion and Politics in the United States.
Summer 2022 | |
---|---|
Course Number | Course Title |
HST 302 | Studies in History |
HST 306 | Studies in US History |
Spring 2022 | |
---|---|
Course Number | Course Title |
HST 306 | Studies in US History |
Fall 2021 | |
---|---|
Course Number | Course Title |
HST 110 | United States Since 1865 |
Summer 2021 | |
---|---|
Course Number | Course Title |
HST 306 | Studies in US History |
Spring 2021 | |
---|---|
Course Number | Course Title |
HST 110 | United States Since 1865 |