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The Cambridge Companion to Religious Studies (Cambridge Companions to Religion)

The Cambridge Companion to Religious Studies (Cambridge Companions to Religion)

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Robert A. Orsi
Cambridge University Press, 3/1/2012
EAN 9780521710145, ISBN10: 0521710146

Paperback, 444 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 2.8 cm
Language: English

The Cambridge Companion to Religious Studies is both informative and provocative, introducing readers to key debates in the contemporary study of religion and suggesting future research possibilities. A group of distinguished scholars takes up some of the most pressing theoretical questions in the field. What is a 'religious tradition'? How are religious texts read? What takes place when a religious practitioner stands before a representation of gods or goddesses, ghosts, ancestors, saints, and other special beings? What roles is religion playing in contemporary global society? The volume emphasizes religion as a lived practice, stressing that people have used and continue to use religious media to engage the circumstances of their lives. The volume's essays should prove valuable and interesting to a broad audience, including scholars in the humanities and social sciences and a general readership, as well as students of religious studies.

Introduction Robert A. Orsi
Part I. Religion and Religious Studies
The Irony of Inheritance
1. On sympathy, suspicion, and studying religion
historical reflections on a doubled inheritance Leigh E. Schmidt
2. Thinking about religion, belief and politics Talal Asad
3. Special things as building blocks of religions Ann Taves
4. The problem of the holy Robert A. Orsi
Part II. Major Theoretical Problems
5. Social order or social chaos Michael J. Puett
6. Tradition
the power of constraint Michael L. Satlow
7. The text and the world Anne M. Blackburn
8. On the role of normativity in religious studies Thomas A. Lewis
9. Translation Martin Kavka
10. Material religion Matthew Engelke
11. Theology and the study of religion
a relationship Christine Helmer
Part III. Methodological Variations
12. Buddhism and violence Bernard Faure
13. Practicing religions Courtney Bender
14. The look of the sacred David Morgan
15. Reforming culture
law and religion today Winnifred Fallers Sullivan
16. Sexing religion R. Marie Griffith
17. Constituting ethical subjectivities Leela Prasad
18. Neo-Pentecostalism and globalization Marla Frederick
19. Religious criticism, secular critique, and the 'critical study of religion'
lessons from the study of Islam Noah Salomon and Jeremy F. Walton.