List of contributors viii
Acknowledgments xii
Preface xiv
Part I Classical and Contemporary Theory: Recycling, Continuity, Progress, or New Departures?
Editorial Commentary: Religion and the Secular; the Sacred and the Profane: The Scope of the Argument 3
1 Personal Reflections in the Mirror of Halévy and Weber 23
David Martin
2 Salvation, Secularization, and De-moralization 39
Bryan Wilson
3 The Pentecostal Gender Paradox: A Cautionary Tale for the
Sociology of Religion 52
Bernice Martin
4 Feminism and the Sociology of Religion: From Gender-blindness
to Gendered Difference 67
Linda Woodhead
5 Melancholia, Utopia, and the Psychoanalysis of Dreams 85
Donald Capps
6 Georg Simmel: American Sociology Chooses the Stone the
Builders Refused 105
Victoria Lee Erickson
7 Transformations of Society and the Sacred in Durkheim’s
Religious Sociology 120
Donald A. Nielsen
8 Classics in the Sociology of Religion: An Ambiguous Legacy
133
Roger O’Toole
9 Individualism, the Validation of Faith, and the Social Nature
of Religion in Modernity 161
Danièle Hervieu-Léger
10 The Origins of Religion 176
Richard K. Fenn
Part II Contemporary Trends in the Relation of Religion to Society Editorial Commentary: Whose Problem is it? The Question of Prediction versus Projection 197
11 Secularization Extended: From Religious “Myth” to Cultural
Commonplace 211
Nicholas J. Demerath III
12 Social Movements as Free-floating Religious Phenomena 229
James A. Beckford
13 The Social Process of Secularization 249
Steve Bruce
14 Patterns of Religion in Western Europe: An Exceptional Case
264
Grace Davie
15 The Future of Religious Participation and Belief in Britain
and Beyond 279
Robin Gill
16 Religion as Diffusion of Values. “Diffused Religion” in the
Context of a Dominant Religious Institution: The Italian Case
292
Roberto Cipriani
17 Spirituality and Spiritual Practice 306
Robert Wuthnow
18 The Renaissance of Community Economic Development among
African-American Churches in the 1990s 321
Katherine Day
19 Hell as a Residual Category: Possibilities Excluded from the
Social System 336
Richard K. Fenn and Marianne Delaporte
Part III The Sociology of Religion and Related Areas of Inquiry Editorial Commentary: Looking for the Boundaries of the Field: Social Anthropology, Theology, and Ethnography 363
20 Acting Ritually: Evidence from the Social Life of Chinese
Rites 371
Catherine Bell
21 Moralizing Sermons, Then and Now 388
Thomas Luckmann
22 Health, Morality and Sacrifice: The Sociology of Disasters
404
Douglas J. Davies
23 Contemporary Social Theory as it Applies to the Understanding
of Religion in Cross-cultural Perspective 418
Peter Beyer
24 The Return of Theology: Sociology’s Distant Relative 432
Kieran Flanagan
25 Epilogue: Toward a Secular View of the Individual 445
Richard K. Fenn
Index 469
Richard K. Fenn is Maxwell M. Upson Professor of Christianity and Society at Princeton Theological Seminary, and is one of the most senior and influential practitioners of his discipline currently at work. He is the author of numerous critically acclaimed books.
‘If a single theme runs through this anthology, it is an
appreciation of the process of secularization. Here, however,
secularization does not trumpet the demise of religion but provides
a lens through which to scrutinize the shifting location and
function of religion in urban, industrial, complex societies. Of
value as a reference tool at all readership levels.’ Choice
‘The volume takes the reader immediately to the most interesting
issues currently debated in the discipline.’ International Review
of Biblical Studies
"This is a milestone of a book." Journal of Contemporary
Religion
"Within the cover there is a very stimulating companion indeed - a
more than adequate travel guide for any student or scholar seeking
a lively and insightful introduction to the contours of the
sociology of religion." BSA Network
Ask a Question About this Product More... |