To elucidate the various ways of approaching the subject matter, this introductory chapter will first outline three different modes of defining religion. In some cultures and historical periods, the category of religion may be alien to the context that is studied. Nevertheless, the phenomenon in question is part of a body of thought and practices that is now identified as religious. How did these phenomena come to be studied as ‘religion’ in that tradition? What is the history of such definitions? We will then address the issue of theory: what is it, and why do you need it? We will also introduce some basic distinctions in levels of analysis that we think are useful to navigate our way through the conversations across disciplinary boundarie...
The purpose of this study is threefold: (1) to give a historical background of the concept of religi...
What is religion? In a book about religion, Christianity and the New Testament, it might well be a g...
<p>Religious phenomenon is a universal symptom, unique and full of mystery. Its existence was always...
To elucidate the various ways of approaching the subject matter, this introductory chapter will firs...
Scholars who identify themselves as anthropologists of religion attempt to work across the disciplin...
What is religion? Despite centuries of study—and despite the proliferation of Religious Studies depa...
During the last decades of the twentieth century, Western philosophy saw a renewed interest in relig...
This Special Issue of Religions approaches “Sámi religion” from a long-term perspective seeing both ...
In the face of continuing debate about the adequacy and definition of the concept of ‘religion’, thi...
Timothy Fitzgerald's critique of the category “religion” was based on two main objections: the study...
Across the humanities and the social sciences, the terms “religion,” “ideology,” and “Marxism” are c...
The study of religion is commonly divided into two sides. On the one side is the descriptive approac...
Anthropologists have spilt much ink deconstructing concepts inherited from the Enlightenment. Religi...
The emergence of a science of religion and religions in which the sacred became a topic of disintere...
<p>Religious Studies is concerned with studying religion or the absence thereof. The concept o...
The purpose of this study is threefold: (1) to give a historical background of the concept of religi...
What is religion? In a book about religion, Christianity and the New Testament, it might well be a g...
<p>Religious phenomenon is a universal symptom, unique and full of mystery. Its existence was always...
To elucidate the various ways of approaching the subject matter, this introductory chapter will firs...
Scholars who identify themselves as anthropologists of religion attempt to work across the disciplin...
What is religion? Despite centuries of study—and despite the proliferation of Religious Studies depa...
During the last decades of the twentieth century, Western philosophy saw a renewed interest in relig...
This Special Issue of Religions approaches “Sámi religion” from a long-term perspective seeing both ...
In the face of continuing debate about the adequacy and definition of the concept of ‘religion’, thi...
Timothy Fitzgerald's critique of the category “religion” was based on two main objections: the study...
Across the humanities and the social sciences, the terms “religion,” “ideology,” and “Marxism” are c...
The study of religion is commonly divided into two sides. On the one side is the descriptive approac...
Anthropologists have spilt much ink deconstructing concepts inherited from the Enlightenment. Religi...
The emergence of a science of religion and religions in which the sacred became a topic of disintere...
<p>Religious Studies is concerned with studying religion or the absence thereof. The concept o...
The purpose of this study is threefold: (1) to give a historical background of the concept of religi...
What is religion? In a book about religion, Christianity and the New Testament, it might well be a g...
<p>Religious phenomenon is a universal symptom, unique and full of mystery. Its existence was always...