Using and adapting the ideas of material religion, this paper considers Wesleyan Methodist circuits: the organisation of chapels within specific geographical areas into co-dependent communities. Interested in circuits as an example of the extension of religious space beyond institutional contexts – the extended geographies of religion – it highlights the importance of thinking about such spaces as material things. Using two circuits in London (Bow and Highgate) as case studies, this paper focuses on representations of circuits and their visual and material qualities. It then explores how material approaches facilitate insights into the differences between how religious leaders designed these spaces and how individuals experienced them. Taki...
In the 1950s and 1960s, thousands of churches were built across Europe in an attempt to keep up with...
This article uses archival references to maintenance and repair to approach nineteenth- and early-tw...
Places of worship in the Christian tradition are often considered to retain fixed and static identit...
Using and adapting the ideas of material religion, this paper considers Wesleyan Methodist circuits:...
Using Wesleyan Methodism in London between 1851 and 1932 as its case study, this paper explores the ...
Using metropolitan Wesleyan Methodist practices in London between 1851 and 1932 as a case study, thi...
Using two geographically contrasting case studies, this paper explores the multiple ways in which Lo...
Using two geographically contrasting case studies, this paper explores the multiple ways in which Lo...
Taking spaces of Wesleyan Methodist practice in London between 1851 and 1932 as its case study, this...
Taking spaces of Wesleyan Methodist practice in London between 1851 and 1932 as its case study, this...
Material culture has emerged in recent decades as a significant theoretical concern for the study of...
The papers in this special issue of Culture and Religion were presented during the 2-day workshop ‘R...
Contains fulltext : 194107.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)In recent years...
This article uses archival references to maintenance and repair to approach nineteenth- and early-tw...
The contribution of nonconformity to group collectivity and community identity has received little a...
In the 1950s and 1960s, thousands of churches were built across Europe in an attempt to keep up with...
This article uses archival references to maintenance and repair to approach nineteenth- and early-tw...
Places of worship in the Christian tradition are often considered to retain fixed and static identit...
Using and adapting the ideas of material religion, this paper considers Wesleyan Methodist circuits:...
Using Wesleyan Methodism in London between 1851 and 1932 as its case study, this paper explores the ...
Using metropolitan Wesleyan Methodist practices in London between 1851 and 1932 as a case study, thi...
Using two geographically contrasting case studies, this paper explores the multiple ways in which Lo...
Using two geographically contrasting case studies, this paper explores the multiple ways in which Lo...
Taking spaces of Wesleyan Methodist practice in London between 1851 and 1932 as its case study, this...
Taking spaces of Wesleyan Methodist practice in London between 1851 and 1932 as its case study, this...
Material culture has emerged in recent decades as a significant theoretical concern for the study of...
The papers in this special issue of Culture and Religion were presented during the 2-day workshop ‘R...
Contains fulltext : 194107.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)In recent years...
This article uses archival references to maintenance and repair to approach nineteenth- and early-tw...
The contribution of nonconformity to group collectivity and community identity has received little a...
In the 1950s and 1960s, thousands of churches were built across Europe in an attempt to keep up with...
This article uses archival references to maintenance and repair to approach nineteenth- and early-tw...
Places of worship in the Christian tradition are often considered to retain fixed and static identit...