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“Enjoying religion” seems to be a contradiction because religion is generally perceived as a serious or even suppressive phenomenon. This volume is the first to study the increase of enjoying religion systematically by presenting eleven new case studies, occurring on four continents. The volume concludes that in our late modern secular societies the enjoyment of religion or of its loose elements is growing. In particular when scholars concentrate on “lived religion” of ordinary people, the cheerful experiences appear to prevail. Many people use pleasant (elements of) religion to add meaning to their lives, to find spiritual fulfillment or a way to salvation, and to experience belonging to a larger unity. At the same time, diverse cultural dynamics of late modern society such as popular culture, commercialization, re-enchantment, and feminization influence this trend of enjoying religion. In spite of secularization, playing with religion appears to be attractive.
Published | Aug 15 2018 |
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Format | Ebook (Epub & Mobi) |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 212 |
ISBN | 9781498555029 |
Imprint | Lexington Books |
Illustrations | 14 b/w photos |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
The editors of Enjoying Religion sought material from a wide range of traditions, methodologies, and geographies, including case studies in which religion provides pleasure, utilizes fun, and is enjoyed. . . . Overall this book is a valuable addition to the movement toward bodily religion and a robust beginning for an important conversation. . . Unearthing the fun and pleasure from a subject that denies these qualities is serious work and this volume provides a solid foundation for this work to begin.
Nova Religio: The Journal Of Alternative And Emergent Religions
It’s delightful to find a scholarly book that puts the fun back into religion. With its coverage of different religious traditions, and many perspectives, this fascinating collection enables the reader to draw interesting broader conclusions about how and why some forms of religion find it easier to embrace joy and sensuality than others.
Linda Woodhead, Lancaster University
Now that emotions in general are increasingly acknowledged as important for religious studies, this book pinpoints enjoyment in particular as a worthwhile flow of devotees’ pleasure and as a theoretical topic worthy of scholarly analysis. A mixture of academic disciplines combines here to cover traditional and niche-novelty forms of meaning-making events to stimulate future studies of human pleasure in ritual play.
Douglas J. Davies, Durham University
Religion is sometimes associated with the ludic, the liminal, and the playful, but this marvelous volume explores the much-less discussed theme of enjoyment. In some very vivid chapters, the contributors take us across the world and across religions. They greatly extend our analytical vocabulary by demonstrating the numerous ways in which we need to take the enjoyment of religion much more seriously.
Simon Coleman, University of Toronto
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