Handbook of the Sociology of Religion
This Handbook showcases research and thinking in the sociology of religion.
Michele Dillon (Edited by)
9780521000789, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 18 August 2003
496 pages
23.6 x 15.6 x 3 cm, 0.696 kg
"Editor Michele Dillon has pulled off quite an impressive feat: soliciting, assembling, and publishing 28 original essays by some of the top sociologists of religion in the United States....The majority of chapters are plainly articulated, informed by sound theory, and bolstered by compelling data....the list of contributors is the closest thing to a 'who's who` of contemporary sociologists of religion to appear in one text that I am aware of. For sociologists of religion, this is easily the best single compendium of research and theory to come out in years, and a hearty testament to the vitality and dynamism of the state of our crucial discipline." Phil Zuckerman, Pitzer College, Contemporary Sociology
This Handbook showcases research and thinking in the sociology of religion. The contributors, all active writers and researchers in the area, provide original chapters focusing on select aspects of their own engagement with the field. Aimed at students and scholars who want to know more about the sociology of religion, this handbook also provides a resource for sociologists in general by integrating broader questions of sociology (e.g. demography, ethnicity, life course, inequality, political sociology) into the analysis of religion. Broadly inclusive of traditional research topics (modernity, secularization, politics) as well as newer interests (feminism, spirituality, faith based community action), this handbook illustrates the validity of diverse theoretical perspectives and research designs to understanding the multi-layered nature of religion as a sociological phenomenon.
Part I. Religion as a Field of Sociological Knowledge: 1. The sociology of religion in late modernity Michele Dillon2. Studying religion, making it sociological Robert Wuthnow3. The ritual roots of society and culture Robert Bellah4. Social forms of religion and religions in contemporary global society Peter Beyer5. The evolution of the sociology of religion: theme and variations Grace DaviesPart II. Religion and Social Change: 6. Demographic methods for the sociology of religion Michael Hout7. Church attendance in the United States Mark Chaves and Laura Stephens8. The dynamics of religious economies Roger Fink and Rodney Stark9. Historicizing the secularization debate: an agenda for research Philip Gorski10. Escaping the procrustean bed: a critical analysis of the study of religious organizations, 1930–2001 Patricia M. Y. Chung11. Religion and spirituality: toward an integrated analysis Wade Clark RoofPart III. Religion and the Life Course: 12. Religious socialization: sources of influence and influences of agency Darren Sherkat13. In rhetoric and practice: defining the 'good family' in local congregations Penny Edgell Becker14. Religion and health: depressive symptoms and mortality as case studies Michael McCullough and Timothy Smith15. Religion, spirituality, and vital involvement in late adulthood Michele Dillon and Paul WinkPart IV. Religion and Social Identity: 16. Religious identities and religious institutions Nancy Ammerman17. Religion and the new immigrants Helen Rose Ebaugh18. A journey of the 'straight way' or the 'roundabout path': Jewish identity in the United States and Israel Arnold Dashefsky, Bernard Lazerwitz and Ephraim Tabory19. Beyond the synogogue Lynn Davidman20. Dis/location: emerging feminist inquiry in the sociology of religion Mary Jo NeitzPart V. Religion, Political Behavior, and Public Culture: 21. Religion and political behavior Jeff Manza and Nathan Wright22. Religious social movements in the public sphere: organization, ideology, and activism Rhys Williams23. Mapping the moral order: depicting the terrain of religious conflict and change Fred Kniss24. Civil society and civil religion as mutually dependent N. J. Demerath, III25. Religion and violence: social processes in comparative perspective John HallPart VI. Religion and Socio-Economic Inequality: 26. Religion, faith-based community organizing, and the struggle for justice Richard Wood27. Latina empowerment, border realities, and faith-based organizations Milagros Pena28. 'Worldly' or 'other worldly'?: activism in an urban religious district Omar McRoberts.
Subject Areas: Sociology & anthropology [JH], Religion & beliefs [HR]