It is by now well known that the modern category of religion has evolved as part of a certain trajectory of Western history. Among its many aspects, this trajectory is about how religion became part of a definitive relationship with the category of the secular – a relationship that implies an understanding of religion as something distinct – and ideally separate – from other categories such as science, politics, and law. The place of the category of religion as part of this semantic as well as institutional landscape of separations makes it relevant to probe the possible consequences for sociology, if we are, as some scholars have argued, living in contexts which are increasingly post-secular. What happens, then, to the object – as well as ...
The article focuses on the main features of the secular world in its interaction with postmodernizat...
Secularization is most productively understood not as declining religion, but as the declining scope...
Comments on Zdenek R. Nespor's article, 'Three European Sociologies of Religion: Beyond the Usual Ag...
It is by now well known that the modern category of religion has evolved as part of a certain trajec...
In the twentieth century, the social scientific study of religion was dominated by debates surroundi...
In this chapter I develop a number of critical reflections on the analysis of religion in both conte...
During the last decades of the twentieth century, Western philosophy saw a renewed interest in relig...
A post-secular society is often defined as one with a renewed interest in the spiritual life. This p...
The secularization thesis is a prominent paradigm within the sociology of religion. It holds that mo...
'Post-secularism' is a term that has emerged in various disciplines, including sociology, to reflect...
Since the sociology of religion became recognised as a distinct sub-discipline over the last century...
Religious identity as one of the types of identity has a close relationship with social identity and...
This article considers the methodology of post-secular society theories for application to research ...
The article reviews three recent pieces of work on secularisation and religion as social scientific ...
Paradigms determine relationships. During the Enlightenment period Emile Durkheim proposed a relatio...
The article focuses on the main features of the secular world in its interaction with postmodernizat...
Secularization is most productively understood not as declining religion, but as the declining scope...
Comments on Zdenek R. Nespor's article, 'Three European Sociologies of Religion: Beyond the Usual Ag...
It is by now well known that the modern category of religion has evolved as part of a certain trajec...
In the twentieth century, the social scientific study of religion was dominated by debates surroundi...
In this chapter I develop a number of critical reflections on the analysis of religion in both conte...
During the last decades of the twentieth century, Western philosophy saw a renewed interest in relig...
A post-secular society is often defined as one with a renewed interest in the spiritual life. This p...
The secularization thesis is a prominent paradigm within the sociology of religion. It holds that mo...
'Post-secularism' is a term that has emerged in various disciplines, including sociology, to reflect...
Since the sociology of religion became recognised as a distinct sub-discipline over the last century...
Religious identity as one of the types of identity has a close relationship with social identity and...
This article considers the methodology of post-secular society theories for application to research ...
The article reviews three recent pieces of work on secularisation and religion as social scientific ...
Paradigms determine relationships. During the Enlightenment period Emile Durkheim proposed a relatio...
The article focuses on the main features of the secular world in its interaction with postmodernizat...
Secularization is most productively understood not as declining religion, but as the declining scope...
Comments on Zdenek R. Nespor's article, 'Three European Sociologies of Religion: Beyond the Usual Ag...