Theorising Religion: Classical and Contemporary Debates

Front Cover
Routledge, 2017 M10 24 - 278 pages
Religion is controversial and challenging. Whilst religious forces are powerful in numerous societies, they have little or no significance for wide swaths of public or private life in other places. The task of theoretical work in the sociology of religion is, therefore, to make sense of this apparently paradoxical situation in which religion is simultaneously significant and insignificant. The chapters of Part One consider the classical roots of ideas about religion that dominated sociological ways of thinking about it for most of the twentieth century. Each chapter offers sound reasons for continuing to find theoretical inspiration and challenge in the sociological classics whilst also seeking ways of enhancing and extending their relevance to religion today. Part Two contains chapters that open up fresh perspectives on aspects of modern, post-modern and ultra-modern religion without necessarily ignoring the classical legacy. The chapters of Part Three chart new directions for the sociological analysis of religion by fundamentally re-thinking its theoretical basis, by extending its disciplinary boundaries and by examining previously overlooked topics.
 

Contents

Introduction
1978
Durkheims Legacy for Social
1988
Weber Rationalisation and Religious Evolution in the Modem
Spiritualism and the ReEnchantment of Modernity
Classical Theory and Contemporary
Towards a PostWestern
Religion in Ultramodernity
Explaining
Understanding Honour and Religion as Resource and Constraint for Young
Preference Structures and Normative Constraints in Movements Outside
Five Stories of Religions
A Minimalist Sociology of Religion
Excarnate and Hypercarnate
Inner Speech and Religious Traditions
Social Theories of the Body in the Sociology of Religion
Integrating Studies of Race and Ethnicity with

Giddens Theory
Religious Control Spiritual Search and the Future

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About the author (2017)

James A. Beckford is Professor of Sociology at the University of Warwick, UK, and John Walliss is Lecturer in Sociology at Liverpool Hope University, UK.

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