Monthly Archives: May 2014

Call for Paper Social Networking in Cyber Spaces: European Muslim’s Participation in (New) Media

Call for Paper

Social Networking in Cyber Spaces: European Muslim’s Participation in (New) Media

27-28 November 2014

Gülen Chair for Intercultural Studies

KU Leuven University, Belgium

https://gulenchair.com/articles/call-for-paper-social-networking-in-cyber-spaces-european-muslims-participation-in-new-media

Keynote Speakers:

Vít Šisler - Assistant Professor at the Faculty of Arts at Charles University in Prague, Member of the Editorial Board of the Journal of Religion, Media and Digital Culture, Managing Editor of CyberOrient, a peer reviewed journal of the virtual Middle East.

(To be confirmed)

Sarah Joseph - CEO and Editor of Muslim lifestyle magazine Emel and commentator on British Muslims. She is a writer and a broadcaster and lectures on Islam both within the UK and internationally (USA, Europe, Middle and Far East).
(To be confirmed)

Key words:
Social Networks and Media, Social Movements, Networking, European Muslims, Transnationalism, Cyber Communities, iMuslims

The increasing growth of the Internet is reshaping Islamic communities worldwide. Non-conventional media and social networks such as Facebook and Twitter are becoming more popular among the Muslim youth as among all parts of the society. The new channels of information and news attract new Muslim publics in Europe. The profile of the people using these networks range from college students to Islamic intellectual authorities. Such an easy and speedy way of connecting to millions of people across the globe also attracts the attention of social movements, which utilize these networks to spread their message to a wider public. Many Muslim networks and social movements, political leaders, Islamic institutions and authorities use these new media spaces to address wider Muslim and also non-Muslim communities, it is not uncommon that they also address and reach certain so-called radical groups.

Much attention also has been given to the use of social media technologies and their ability to spark massive social change. Some commentators have remarked that these connection technologies, ranging from smartphones to Facebook, can cause revolutionary digital disruptions, while others have even gone so far as to suggest that social media platforms such as Facebook and Twitter may have incited the Arab Spring. During the Arab Spring or Revolutions, the role of social media as an important and effective tool that had a political force to mobilize people, has been commonly acknowledged. Zeynep Tüfekçi of the University of North Carolina quotes that, "Social media in general, and Facebook in particular, provided new sources of information the regime could not easily control and were crucial in shaping how citizens made individual decisions about participating in protests, the logistics of protest, and the likelihood of success." However, many scholars argue today that the reason of the revolutions were not social media, they also commonly agree that information dispersion, whether by text or image, was pre-dominantly managed through social media. Hence similar arguments were made in part of the Gezi Protests that took place in Turkey, in the late spring of 2013, where the protesters declared themselves journalists as they spread images and information through social media; such information they claim was censored by the mainstream media.

While many researches have focused primarily on the Internet that has played a role in Muslim radicalization, there is less emphasis on the Internet that is also being utilized to encourage Muslims to advocate for gender equality, citizenship and human rights within an Islamic framework, more generally. The social, political and cultural participation of Muslims via Internet open new discussions topics and research areas on Muslims living in Europe. Discussions groups, Facebook communities and all other cyber activism are interlinked with the debates on public sphere and citizenship. The never ending space of cyber activism transform the old debates on Islamic knowledge, authority, citizenship, Muslim communities and networks. The way that this transformation comes out is that young Muslims who are familiar with online platforms, use these spaces to enter debates and get a be-it informal space to present and represent their identities, ideologies, aspirations and even solutions. These platforms can offer the periphery voices to raise their experiences with stereotypes and marginalization. According to some scholars, bloggers and internet forums challenge the traditional media landscape by contributing to public constructions of Islam. The cyber space not only offers internet-natives platforms to argue about social problems but it also allows them to ask questions and find immediate and updated answers to problems concerning their own religious obligations and ethical concerns. Social media provides information accessible to Muslims all over the world, who can connect. It also provides them spaces to argue about belonging to a minority religion of a country they are a citizen of, and how to balance their cultural-religious sensibilities with their citizenship duties.

During this workshop we want to address the politics of identity construction and representations of Muslims in Europe through having a look at the updated mediascape based on but not limited by following headlines:

  1. Muslim networks and movements in Western Europe : Formation of transnational communities

There are current debates about the links Muslims in Europe have with Muslims around the globe, and whether these links create a separate global Muslim identity in contrast to an integrated European identity. There is also the debate as to whether such links create a passage to radicalism. This section focuses on how Muslims in Europe “link” with other Muslims and Muslim groups across the globe. It looks into how Muslim networks across the globe influence Muslims in the West in terms of integration, social-political participation, education, etc. It also looks into how these groups influence each other, and how they reflect on issues concerning Muslim in Europe and across the globe.

On a second level it ask the following questions; how do communication technologies create a new transnational Muslim community? How are transnational Muslim communities regardless of ethnic differences created through the use of mass media and social media? How is Islamic discourse spread through mass media, how is an Islamic thought developed and dispersed through social (mass) media? How do virtual communities bring about social change? What are the dynamics between Muslim intellectuals, mass media, and knowledge dispersion? What are the relationships between diaspora’s and online networking?

  1. Social networking and Muslims in the West

This section focuses on how Muslims connect online to learn more about their religion, for online dating/marriage, to share experiences of stereotyping/victimization/racism/islamophobia, to present/represent their ideology. It also looks into how through social media, Muslims create a space of debate, construct and share aspirations-imaginaries-products. How is consumerism among Muslims affected by shared images on these networks? How does the common sharing of certain video’s and texts, create a global common culture among Muslim youth?

  1. (Social) Media and Participation: Muslims in Europe

This section focuses on how social media and the press influences political tendencies of Muslims in Europe. How do Muslims construct a sense of belonging and political responsibility in Western Europe, and does social media and the press have an effect on these phenomena? How does media create a common sense of awareness and how does this awareness in the global and local scene have an impact on their social participation? How do Muslim charity organizations function within the sphere of media and social media?

Tuition Fees

Presenters and participants are expected to pay the costs of their travel and accommodation. The organizers have a reduced prize from hotel ‘La Royale’ in Leuven.

The tuition fees to attend the workshop will be arranged as follows:

Speakers and delegates: 50€

The registration fee includes a conference dinner and refreshments.

Outcome

A proceedings book of the workshop will be printed and distributed in advance of the workshop itself.

Within six months à maximum 1 year of the event, an edited book will be produced and published by the GCIS with Leuven University Press, comprising some or all of the papers presented at the Workshop, at the condition that they pass a peer review organized by the publisher. The papers will be arranged and introduced, and to the extent appropriate, edited, by scholar(s) to be appointed by the Editorial Board.

Copyright of the papers accepted to the Workshop will be vested in the GCIS.

Selection Criteria

The workshop will accept up to 20 participants, each of whom must meet the following requirements:

  • have a professional and/or research background in related topics of the workshop;

  • be able to attend the entire programme.

Since the Workshop expects to address a broad range of topics while the number of participants has to be limited, writers submitting abstracts are requested to bear in mind the need to ensure that their language is technical only where it is absolutely necessary and the language should be intelligible to non-specialists and specialists in disciplines other than their own; and present clear, coherent arguments in a rational way and in accordance with the usual standards and format for publishable work.

Timetable

  1. Abstracts (300–500 words maximum) and CVs (maximum 1 page) to be received by 15 July 2014.

  2. Abstracts to be short-listed by the Editorial Board and papers invited by 20th July 2014.

  3. Papers (3,000 words minimum – 5,500 words maximum, excluding bibliography) to be received by 10th September 2014.

  4. Papers reviewed by the Editorial Board and classed as: Accepted – No Recommendations; Accepted – See Recommendations; Conditional Acceptance – See Recommendations; Not Accepted, by 20th September 2014.

  5. Final papers to be received by 15th October 2014.

Workshop Editorial Board

Leen D’Haenens, KU Leuven

Johan Leman, KU Leuven

Merve Reyhan Kayikci, KU Leuven

Saliha Özdemir, KU Leuven

Workshop Co-ordinator

Merve Reyhan Kayikci, KU Leuven

Saliha Özdemir, KU Leuven

Mieke Groeninck, KU Leuven

Venue

KU Leuven University

The international workshop is organized by KU Leuven Gülen Chair for Intercultural Studies. It will be entirely conducted in English and will be hosted by KU Leuven Gülen Chair in Leuven.

Papers and abstract should be sent to Merve Reyhan Kayikci:

mervereyhan.kayikci

For more information plz contact:

Merve Reyhan Kayikci

KU Leuven Gülen Chair for Intercultural Studies

Parkstraat 45 - box 3615

3000 Leuven

Transnational Faiths: Latin-American Immigrants and their Religions in Japan

Transnational Faiths:
Latin-American Immigrants and their Religions in Japan Hugo Córdova Quero, Graduate Theological Union, USA and Rafael Shoji, Pontifical Catholic University, CERAL, Brazil Ashgate, 2014

https://www.ashgate.com/isbn/9781409435259

Japan has witnessed the arrival of thousands of immigrants, since the 1990s, from Latin America, especially from Brazil and Peru. Along with immigrants from other parts of the world, they all express the new face of Japan - one of multiculturality and multi-ethnicity. Newcomers are having a strong impact in local faith communities and playing an unexpected role in the development of communities.

This book focuses on the role that faith and religious institutions play in the migrants’ process of settlement and integration. The authors also focus on the impact of immigrants’ religiosity amidst religious groups formerly established in Japan. Religion is an integral aspect of the displacement and settlement process of immigrants in an increasing multi-ethnic, multicultural and pluri-religious contemporary Japan.
Religious institutions and their social networks in Japan are becoming the first point of contact among immigrants. This book exposes and explores the often missed connection of the positive role of religion and faith-based communities in facilitating varied integrative ways of belonging for immigrants. The authors highlight the faith experiences of immigrants themselves by bringing their voices through case studies, interviews, and ethnographic research throughout the book to offer an important contribution to the exploration of multiculturalism in Japan.

Contents

Foreword

Introduction: on transnational faiths and their faithfuls Hugo Córdova Quero and Rafael Shoji

The making of ‘Brazilian Japanese’ Pentecostalism: immigration as a main factor for religious conversion Rafael Shoji

‘Bestowing the light of the Gospel in Japan’: the formation of an ethnic church in the Dekassegui community Masanobu Yamada

The potentiality of Brazilian immigrants’ religious communities as social capital: the case of Christian churches in Toyohashi under an economic depression So Hoshino

Diversity and education: Brazilian children and religious practices in everyday life at Japanese public schools Nilta Dias

Citizenship of God: female sex workers and the Roman Catholic Church’s advocacy for human rights Marcela Inés Méndez Vázquez

Transnational believers: understanding the religious experiences of Peruvian immigrants in Japan Olmes Milani

The activities of Soka Gakkai and Sekai Kyūseikyō among Japanese Brazilians in Japan Regina Yoshie Matsue

Becoming Brazilian in Japan: umbanda and ethnocultural identity in transnational times Ushi Arakaki

Transcendental communications: the reinterpretation of the Brazilian Spiritist continuum in Japan, Rafael Shoji and Hugo Córdova Quero

Bibliography

Index

About the Authors:

Dr Hugo Córdova Quero holds a Ph.D. from the Department of Interdisciplinary Studies at the Graduate Theological Union at Berkeley, with allied field at the Department of Ethnic Studies, University of California at Berkeley. He received a Master in Divinity from ISEDET University in Buenos Aires (1998) and a Master of Arts in Systematic Theology and (Post)Colonial studies from the Graduate Theological Union at Berkeley (2003). He was Professor of Ecumenism at the Santa Maria de Guadalupe Roman Catholic Seminary in Buenos Aires (1998-2001) and visiting scholar at the Chinese University of Hong Kong (2006). He was visiting researcher at the Center for Lusophone Studies, Sophia University (Jesuit), in Tokyo, Japan (2006-2009). His areas of research include theology, ethnic studies, gender studies, critical theories (feminist, queer, and post-colonial), and cultural studies.

Dr Rafael Shoji holds a Ph.D. from the Leibniz University of Hanover
(Germany) and developed postdoctoral research in the Pontifical University of Sao Paulo and at Nanzan University. He is a co-founder and researcher of the Center for the Study of Oriental Religions (CERAL) at the Pontifical University of Sao Paulo. He has published on Japanese religions in Brazil, Japanese Brazilian culture and comparative studies on Buddhism and Christianity. As a Japanese Studies fellow of the Japan Foundation at the Nanzan Institute for Religion and Culture (Nagoya,
Japan) he was recently engaged in research on the religions among Brazilians in Japan, especially the reinterpretation of Christianity.

Parution Academia : “Parcours de féministes musulmanes belges”

Parcours de féministes musulmanes belges
De l’engagement dans l’islam au droit des femmes ?

Ghaliya Djelloul

2013
ISBN : 978-2-8061-0103-7
Prix : 13€ - 14,50€ hors Belgique et France

Résumé
L’engagement de femmes musulmanes belges sur le terrain des droits des femmes est de plus en plus visible : qu’elles soient impliquées dans le tissu associatif sociopolitique, religieux ou qu’elles contribuent intellectuellement aux débats en cours, ces militantes produisent des discours féministes à partir de ou dans leur religion. A partir de récits de vie, cette enquête analyse, le processus de construction d’une identité en rupture et aspirant au changement social, celle de « féministe musulmane ».

Informations complémentaires, couverture et table des matières : www.editions-academia.be/index2.php

Présentation du livre et bon de commande : www.academia-bruylant.be/doc/BDC_IEC5.pdf

Launching the Ashgate Studies in Pilgrimage Series

Launching the Ashgate Studies in Pilgrimage Series

Pilgrimage Politics and Place Making in Eastern EuropeThe Ashgate Studies in Pilgrimage Series will be unveiled later this month with two volumes, Muslim and Catholic Pilgrimage Practices by Albertus Bagus Laksana and Pilgrimage, Politics and Place-Making in Eastern Europe by John Eade and Mario Katic.

David Shervington, the assistant editor for the Religion and Theology list who has worked on bringing the series to fruition, is delighted to welcome series editors Simon Coleman, Dee Dyas, John Eade and Jas’ Elsner to our publishing programme.

“We have been excited to see the response from the academic community.
Our aim is for the series to become an important focal point for the academic study of pilgrimage and to gather together the work of new and established scholars across the disciplines.”

Muslim and Catholic Pilgrimage PracticesThe first of the two books to launch, Muslim and Catholic Pilgrimage Practices, offers crucial insights into some of the most challenging questions in Muslim-Christian encounters and reveals the importance of shared pilgrimage tradition among Muslims and Catholics in South Central Java. This book is a comparative theological and phenomenological work on the topic of local pilgrimage that combines local sources in the vernacular and wider Muslim and Christian theological traditions.

Pilgrimage, Politics and Place-Making in Eastern Europe will also introduce the Pilgrimage Studies series. This book brings together scholars from eastern and south-eastern Europe to explore the crossing of borders in terms of the relationship between pilgrimage and politics, and the role which this plays in the process of both sacred and secular place-making.

If you are interested in submitting a proposal for the series, please email David Shervington, Prof. Simon Coleman, Prof. John Eade, Dr Dee Dyas and Dr Jas’ Elsner.

dshervington@ashgatepublishing.com
simon.coleman@utoronto.ca
j.eade@roehampton.ac.uk
Dee.Dyas@york.ac.uk
jas.elsner@ccc.ox.ac.uk

Find out more about our new Ashgate Studies in Pilgrimage Series https://www.ashgate.com/default.aspx?page=5097&series_id=619&calcTitle=1

Books in the series
https://www.ashgate.com/default.aspx?page=1249&series_id=619&calcTitle=1

New Book

The New Reform Judaism: Challenges and Reflections

Dana Evan Kaplan

In light of profound demographic, social, and technological developments, it has become increasingly clear that the Reform movement will need to make major changes to meet the needs of a quickly evolving American Jewish population. Younger Americans in particular differ from previous generations in how they relate to organized religion, often preferring to network through virtual groups or gather in informal settings of their own choosing.

Dana Evan Kaplan, an American Reform Jew and pulpit rabbi, argues that rather than focusing on the importance of loyalty to community, Reform Judaism must determine how to engage the individual in a search for existential meaning. It should move us toward a critical, scholarly understanding of the Hebrew Bible, that we may emerge with the perspectives required by a postmodern world. Such a Reform Judaism can at once help us understand how the ancient world molded our most cherished religious traditions and guide us in addressing the increasingly complex social problems of our day.

Rabbi Dana Kaplan traces the ways in which Reform Judaism has met the challenges of living in a secular society and sets forth his view of what it must do moving forward. He argues that a tent so big it includes every point of view is too vague to win the souls of today’s young people. Kaplan’s book is a warning that, despite its expensive buildings and trained professional staffs, the Reform movement may not be able to sustain itself unless it can articulate a reason for its existence.

Rabbi Jack Reimer

J Weekly of Northern California

BOOKLIST REVIEW

Rabbi Kaplan’s accessible and compelling exploration of the makings, markings, and current state of Reform Judaism provides an informative, comprehensive tour for both those new to the subject and those familiar with it. Kaplan surveys contemporary scholars, American Reform leaders, and "everyday" people who have come to Reform Judaism from other traditions or have become more aware of their identities as Reform Jews to personalize his presentation of history, social anthropology, and theology. Kaplan also does a fine job of explaining facts and discussing experiences. With a focus on individuals who reside elsewhere than the Northeastern U.S. seaboard and his own current association with a synagogue in Jamaica, the often exaggerated points of geographic and cultural connections fall away and give this book a feeling of broadness. An ideal candidate for those who find intellectual nurture in books like Martin Gilbert’s Jews in the Twentieth Century (2001) or simply wonder what exactly is this thing called being Jewish means for many in the twenty-first century.

New book from NYU Press - IMMIGRANT FAITH

Immigrant Faith: Patterns of Immigrant Religion in the United States, Canada, and Western Europe

Phillip Connor, Ph.D.

New York University Press – August 2014

More details and pre-order: https://bit.ly/TxL4us

Overview

Immigrant Faith examines trends and patterns relating to religion in the lives of immigrants. The volume moves beyond specific studies of particular faiths in particular immigrant destinations to present the religious lives of immigrants in the United States, Canada, and Europe on a broad scale.

Religion is not merely one aspect among many in immigrant lives. Immigrant faith affects daily interactions, shapes the future of immigrants in their destination society, and influences society beyond the immigrants themselves. In other words, to understand immigrants, one must understand their faith.

Drawing on census data and other surveys, including data sources from several countries and statistical data from thousands of immigrant interviews, the volume provides a concise overview of immigrant religion. It sheds light on whether religion shapes the choice of destination for migrants, if immigrants are more or less religious after migrating, if religious immigrants have an easier adjustment, or if religious migrants tend to fare better or worse economically than non-religious migrants.

Immigrant Faith covers demographic trends from initial migration to settlement to the transmission of faith to the second generation. It offers the perfect introduction to big picture patterns of immigrant religion for scholars and students, as well as religious leaders and policy makers.

Phillip Connor is a research associate at the Pew Research Center’s Religion & Public Life Project.

Editorial Reviews

“With Immigrant Faith, Phillip Connor establishes himself as a leading scholar of immigrant religion, bringing together a vast amount of data, expertly analyzing it, and providing a succinct summary of the important patterns. I am especially impressed with the book’s scope and clarity.”

—Robert Wuthnow, Princeton University

"Presents a unique portrait of the connections between religion and immigration in the Western world. Immigrant Faith is the first study of immigrant religion based on quantitative analyses, and it is also the first to examine religion and immigration across varied national contexts and diverse religious traditions. Connor examines how religion influences the transition to the destination country, and how migration affects religiosity. This is a must-read book for anyone trying to understand the importance of religion for immigrants in the U.S., Canada, and Europe."

—Darren Sherkat, Southern Illinois University

Religion, Nation(alism) and Transnationalism Symposium

The University of Western Sydney’s Religion and Society Research Centre invites you to attend the:

Religion, Nation(alism) and Transnationalism Symposium

Speakers:

Saïd Arjomand, State University of New York

Julia Day Howell, University of Western Sydney

Mark Hutchinson, University of Western Sydney

Patrick Michel, École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales

Enzo Pace, University of Padua

Bryan Turner, Australian Catholic University and City University of New York

Firdaus Wajdi, State University of Jakarta and University of Western Sydney

Date: Wednesday, 09 July 2014

Time: 09:00 AM – 16:30 PM

Venue: UWS Bankstown Campus, Building 5, Lecture Theatre 15

RSVP: j.fishman by Wednesday, 2 July 2014 – for catering purposes (please advise of any special dietary requirements)

Symposium Introduction

With the permeability of borders and the greatly increased speed and volume of international communication and transportation, we have entered a new era of transnationalism. In this post-Westphalian world, religions are taking part in a network society that cuts across borders. If world religions have dominated the global sphere for centuries, today we are faced with a plethora of new religious recompositions. This symposium will explore the impact of globalisation on the relationship between religion and nation, religion and nationalism, and the changes that transnationalism has brought on religious groups (and vice versa).

Please refer to the attached flyer for further information.

Religion, Nation(alism) and Transnationalism Symposium.pdf

Multiple Secularities: Religion and Modernity in the Global Age

Special Issue: Multiple Secularities: Religion and Modernity in the Global Age INTERNATIONAL SOCIOLOGY November 2013; 28 (6) https://iss.sagepub.com/content/28/6.toc

‘Multiple Secularities: Religion and Modernity in the Global Age’ - Introduction International Sociology November 2013 28: 605-611

Articles

Marian Burchardt, Monika Wohlrab-Sahr, and Ute Wegert ‘Multiple secularities’: Postcolonial variations and guiding ideas in India and South Africa

Gudrun Krämer
Modern but not secular: Religion, identity and the ordre public in the Arab Middle East

David Lehmann
Religion as heritage, religion as belief: Shifting frontiers of secularism in Europe, the USA and Brazil

Peter Beyer
Questioning the secular/religious divide in a post-Westphalian world

Ann Swidler
African affirmations: The religion of modernity and the modernity of religion

Law, Religion and Disability

Call for proposals: “Law, Religion and Disability”

Special Issue of the Canadian Journal of Disability Studies

The relationship of law, religion and disability is complex, emerging and still in development as a research area. Scholarship on religion and disability has included feminist reflections regarding religion and disability (e.g. Minister 2013) and analysis of the physical isolation that can result in congregations where accommodations are made but without reflection on the communal aspects of integration (Eiesland 1994). Further, health care providers working with disabled individuals negotiate and navigate their own religious identities in their professional sphere (Bray, Egan and Beagan 2012). Legal advancement within the disability movement has produced results such as the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, the Americans with Disabilities Act and the Accessibility for Ontarians with Disabilities Act. Public and policy challenges remain highly contested and disability advocates reflect on the limitations of existing policy as well as the challenge of the application of these policies (e.g. Prince 2012; Johner 2013).

We are seeking articles that articulate the diverse perspectives of disability studies as it relates both to law and religion. There are multiple ways the religion, law and disability intersect with one another. The special issue intends to explore overlapping themes in dialogue to reflect on the current discourse about disability, disabled identities and its interconnections with law and religion.

Possible topics can include, but are not limited to:

· What social, cultural or religious norms have created exclusive or inclusive environments? E.g. What constraints might the Quebec Charter of Values have created for individuals at the intersection of religion and disabled identities?

· Religious individuals and organizations face challenges regarding the theological debates regarding inclusivity versus exclusivity in the accommodation of disabled individuals. What are some of the challenges of negotiating theological doctrine and what are the nuances made possible through theology regarding disability?

· How is disability taught or not taught, in schools or within religious institutions? What are the policies in the education system regarding disability and what challenges are ongoing regarding education and disability?

· How do religious organizations and law respond to disability within a health framework? What challenges are faced by healthcare workers who are religiously identified or disabled? In what ways are religion, law and disability or disabled identities negotiated?

We welcome submissions from across the disciplines of law, religious studies and disability studies, as well as submissions from outside those fields. Proposals should be no more than 2 pages in length (single spaced) and should include: theoretical and methodological approach; central thesis or argument; and data used within article (i.e. legislation, doctrine). Proposals must be submitted to Ravi Malhotra (Ravi.Malhotra) and Heather Shipley (hshipley) by September 30, 2014. Notifications will be sent out by November 15, 2014 and final submissions will be due January 30, 2015. Full articles should be between 6,000-7,000 words, using the Turabian style guide (16th Edition) or another recognized citation style. All final articles will be subject to the peer-review process. Publication is conditional on reviewer reports. As per Canadian Journal of Disability Studies policies, all methods and methodologies and disciplines are welcome, as are submissions in French or English. This CFP additionally invites perspectives on religion from across traditions, and legal perspectives from outside of Canada or North America.

Law Religion CJDS CFP.pdf

Latest Release: from SAGE: Religion, Culture and Society: A Global Approach Andrew Singleton (Monash University).

New book from SAGE:

Religion, Culture and Society: A Global Approach
by Andrew Singleton (Monash University).

This is a rich and dynamic introduction to the varieties of religious life and the central issues in the sociology of religion today. It leads the reader through the key ideas and main debates within the field as well as offering in-depth descriptions and analysis of topics such as secularization, fundamentalism, Pentecostal Christianity, Buddhism, Hinduism, Islam, atheism, ‘The spiritual marketplace’, digital religion and new religions like Wicca.

Emphasising religion as a global phenomenon, examining especially the ways in which globalization has had an impact on everyday religious life, Singleton has created an illuminating text suitable for students in a wide range of courses looking at religion as a social and cultural field.

"The reader is taken on a global exploration of the forms and diversities of religions and their social and cultural contexts… It is up to the minute in research and theory, and comfortably grounded in the traditions of the social explanation of things religious and spiritual."
- Gary Bouma AM, Monash University

" A very nice introduction to the sociology of religion for undergraduate students and non-academic readers…Theoretically informed, substantively rich, and easy reading, I recommend Singleton’s book as a valuable orientation to the sociological study of religion."
- Christian Smith University of Notre Dame

"Tells how sociology of religion originated in the work of key nineteenth and twentieth century theorists and then brings the story into the present era of globalization, hybrid spirituality, and the Internet. Students of religion will find this an engaging and informative survey of the field."
- Robert Wuthnow, Princeton University

"It considers the ‘big questions’ - What is religion? How is religion changing in a modern world? What is the future of religion? – and addresses them through tangible case studies and observations of contemporary life. Its global perspective reflects the breadth, diversity and vibrancy of this field."
- Sylvia Collins-Mayo, Kingston University

Available at Amazon:
https://tinyurl.com/oecwzge

Book Depository:
https://www.bookdepository.com/Religion-Culture-Society-Andrew-Singleton/9781446202913