Recognizing the Non-religious: Reimagining the Secular
Autor Lois Leeen Limba Engleză Hardback – 30 iul 2015
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780198736844
ISBN-10: 0198736843
Pagini: 248
Dimensiuni: 148 x 222 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.43 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0198736843
Pagini: 248
Dimensiuni: 148 x 222 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.43 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Recenzii
Lee's book should be studied by theologians, seminary professors, those engaged in the sociological study of religion, secularization, and by the secular and non-religious.
Lois Lee offers a nuanced account of how secular society sits in relation to religion ... The book is well written and carefully argued ... The book contributes to the vocabulary, theory and methodology of studying and understanding religion and secularity and will be of interest to anyone versed in these sociological debates ... However, there is value too for non-specialists; for anyone interested in engaging with society around them, it expands how we might think about people's relation to religion.
This is, in many ways, an important book. Lee's work is part of a new wave of anthropological and sociological studies of secular, atheist, irreligious and non-religious formations. These new studies have asked whether questions that have been asked about religion questions of embodiment, materiality or performance might be productive when applied to humanists, atheists (new or old) or agnostics. Lee herself has been an important catalyst for much of this new work: she set up the NRSN (the Nonreligion and Secularity Network) that, through its journal and events, has provided an important platform for new research and experiments. On that basis alone, this book should be on the reading lists of students interested both in theoretical innovations in religious studies as well as new research on secular and non-religious formations.
For those of us working directly within non-religion and secularity studies, Lee has provided a very valuable service, laying the groundwork for a common language for a still nascent but rapidly developing field, as well as expanding the horizons of research possibilities.
This is simply the most analytically sophisticated discussion of non-religion/secularity written to date. Ambitious, thorough, commanding, and piercing, this book takes our understanding of--and theorising about-- non-religion to a whole new, and thoroughly satisfying, level. This book is a veritable scholarly feast.
This book is both innovative and insightful. In it, Lois Lee recognises non-religious experience as a lived and above all social reality, rather than a reasoned and individualized epistemology. The shift in emphasis from the hollowly secular to the substantively non-religious will, I have no doubt, provoke a lively debate.
Lois Lee offers a nuanced account of how secular society sits in relation to religion ... The book is well written and carefully argued ... The book contributes to the vocabulary, theory and methodology of studying and understanding religion and secularity and will be of interest to anyone versed in these sociological debates ... However, there is value too for non-specialists; for anyone interested in engaging with society around them, it expands how we might think about people's relation to religion.
This is, in many ways, an important book. Lee's work is part of a new wave of anthropological and sociological studies of secular, atheist, irreligious and non-religious formations. These new studies have asked whether questions that have been asked about religion questions of embodiment, materiality or performance might be productive when applied to humanists, atheists (new or old) or agnostics. Lee herself has been an important catalyst for much of this new work: she set up the NRSN (the Nonreligion and Secularity Network) that, through its journal and events, has provided an important platform for new research and experiments. On that basis alone, this book should be on the reading lists of students interested both in theoretical innovations in religious studies as well as new research on secular and non-religious formations.
For those of us working directly within non-religion and secularity studies, Lee has provided a very valuable service, laying the groundwork for a common language for a still nascent but rapidly developing field, as well as expanding the horizons of research possibilities.
This is simply the most analytically sophisticated discussion of non-religion/secularity written to date. Ambitious, thorough, commanding, and piercing, this book takes our understanding of--and theorising about-- non-religion to a whole new, and thoroughly satisfying, level. This book is a veritable scholarly feast.
This book is both innovative and insightful. In it, Lois Lee recognises non-religious experience as a lived and above all social reality, rather than a reasoned and individualized epistemology. The shift in emphasis from the hollowly secular to the substantively non-religious will, I have no doubt, provoke a lively debate.
Notă biografică
Lois Lee is a Research Fellow in the Department of Religious Studies at the University of Kent. She is a sociologist whose work focuses on the empirical study of nonreligion and atheism and, more widely, on the theory and study of culturally diverse and differentiated societies. Lois is founding director of the Nonreligion and Secularity Research Network (NSRN) and co-edits the journal Secularism and Nonreligion. As well as work in academic journals and the media, Lois' publication include the edited volumes Secularity and Non-religion (Routledge) and Negotiating Religion (Ashgate). She is co-editor of the book series, Religion and Its Others: Studies in Religion, Nonreligion and Secularity (De Gruyter).