Home > Subject index > Religion > Table of contents
Subject: Religion  Book Title: Everyday Religion
Everyday Religion
Observing Modern Religious Lives
Ammerman, Nancy T. (Editor), Professor of Sociology of Religion, School of Theology and Department of Sociology, Boston University
Print publication date: 2007
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: January 2007
Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-530541-8
doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195305418.001.0001
 
Abstract: Life at the beginning of the 21st century is something the social theory of the last century would have found hard to explain. Science, capitalism, and politics are pervasive and powerful in the everyday lives of ever-expanding layers of the world’s population. But so is religion. This book is an attempt to let “everyday religion” raise critical questions about how we understand the role of religion in society. We take pluralism and choice as givens, for instance, but we find “rational choice” theories too thin to explain the religious expressions we document. We look for religion in both “private” and “public” spaces, and ask about the social circumstances of religion’s presence and absence. In the end, we find that no simple theory of secularization or revival can explain how modern religious lives unfold.

Keywords: rational choice, secularization, pluralism, social theory, modern
Table of Contents
Introduction: Observing Religious Modern Lives
You have access to the full text for this item.
1. Vicarious Religion: A Methodological Challenge
You have access to the abstract and full text for this item.     You have access to the full text for this item.
2. Religion as Communication: The Changing Shape of Catholicism in Europe
You have access to the abstract and full text for this item.     You have access to the full text for this item.
3. The New Voluntarism and the Case of Unsynagogued Jews
You have access to the abstract and full text for this item.     You have access to the full text for this item.
4. Religion, Twice Removed: Exploring the Role of Media in Religious Understandings among “Secular” Young People
You have access to the abstract and full text for this item.     You have access to the full text for this item.
5. Virtually Boundless?: Youth Negotiating Tradition in Cyberspace
You have access to the abstract and full text for this item.     You have access to the full text for this item.
6. Redefining the Boundaries of Belonging: The Transnationalization of Religious Life
You have access to the abstract and full text for this item.     You have access to the full text for this item.
7. When a Funeral Isn't Just a Funeral: The Layered Meaning of Everyday Action
You have access to the abstract and full text for this item.     You have access to the full text for this item.
8. A Place on the Map: Communicating Religious Presence in Civic Life
You have access to the abstract and full text for this item.     You have access to the full text for this item.
9. Connections and Contradictions: Exploring the Complex Linkages between Faith and Family
You have access to the abstract and full text for this item.     You have access to the full text for this item.
10. Beyond Literalism: Reflexive Spirituality and Religious Meaning
You have access to the abstract and full text for this item.     You have access to the full text for this item.
11. Embodied Practices: Negotiation and Resistance
You have access to the abstract and full text for this item.     You have access to the full text for this item.
12. Touching the Transcendent: Rethinking Religious Experience in the Sociological Study of Religion
You have access to the abstract and full text for this item.     You have access to the full text for this item.
13. Studying Everyday Religion: Challenges for the Future
You have access to the abstract and full text for this item.     You have access to the full text for this item.
Index
You have access to the full text for this item.
doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195305418.001.0001
Quick Search Form
 
scroll up fast
scroll up
 
scroll down
scroll down fast
Part I Tradition Dislodged but Not Lost
Part II Religion “Out of Place”
Part III Producing Everyday Religious Lives