Summary
Contents
Subject index
“The editor has shown clearly the new dimensions in sociology of religion which the classical schools neglected as personal and private concerns and which do not fit into the positivistic approach to the study of religion. This book introduces new pardigms in the study of sociology of religion to be developed in the context of new religious movements…. This book is a valuable addition to the fields of sociology of religion and new social movements.” –Economic and Political Weekly From the evangelical and charismatic Christianity to the growth of Islamic fundamentalism, society today is witnessing an explosion of religious activity and revival. Yet, since the 1960s, sociologists have been proclaiming that religion has been in its death throes. Can such dynamic religious forces be at work if religion is dying? What is happening? And what do we expect to happen to religion in the coming decades? In A Future for Religion?, a leading team of scholars responds to these questions and offers a glimpse of where religion is heading. In their analyses, the authors explore several areas traditionally excluded from sociology of religion texts: religious experience, emotional renewal, religion and the body, comparative analyses, the links between religion and politics, social movements, and immigration. Each chapter summarizes a particular direction, provides data from current research, and offers an agenda for future research. Written in an accessible, inviting style, A Future for Religion? is ideally suited to courses in the sociology of religion. “This is a useful and sometimes very interesting handbook…. It combines theory and practical sense in good measure.” –Seminar
New Social Movement Theory and the Sociology of Religion: Synergies and Syntheses
New Social Movement Theory and the Sociology of Religion: Synergies and Syntheses
After a long period of disciplinary isolation (see Beckford 1985; Robertson 1985; Turner 1983), the sociology of religion has increasingly been opening its doors to new interests and approaches. Robbins (1988a, 17) accords particular significance to the development of emergent linkages with other subareas of sociology, notably medical sociology, the sociology of deviance and social control, the sociology of organizations, social psychology, and social movements. In the latter case, one of the most promising leads for future theoretical development has been the synergy that has been observed between the sociology of religion and what has come to be known as the paradigm ...
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