Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- General editors' preface
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: from the secular to the supernatural
- PART I Society, religion and human agency
- PART II Praxis, narrative and religious language
- PART III From the modern subject to the postmodern self
- PART IV The option for the future
- Index
- Cambridge Studies In Ideology And Religion
General editors' preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 December 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- General editors' preface
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: from the secular to the supernatural
- PART I Society, religion and human agency
- PART II Praxis, narrative and religious language
- PART III From the modern subject to the postmodern self
- PART IV The option for the future
- Index
- Cambridge Studies In Ideology And Religion
Summary
Only twenty years ago it was widely assumed that religion had lost its previous place in Western culture and that this pattern would spread throughout the world. Since then religion has become a renewed force, recognized as an important factor in the modern world in all aspects of life, cultural, economic and political. This is true not only of the Third World, but in Europe East and West, and in North America. It is no longer a surprise to find a religious factor at work in areas of political tension.
Religion and ideology, form a mixture which can be of interest to the observer, but in practice dangerous and explosive. Our information about such matters comes for the most part from three types of sources. The first is the media which understandably tend to concentrate on newsworthy events, without taking the time to deal with the underlying issues of which they are but symptoms. The second source comprises studies by social scientists who often adopt a functionalist and reductionist view of the faith and beliefs which motivate those directly involved in such situations. Finally, there are the statements and writings of those committed to the religious or ideological movements themselves. We seldom lack information, but there is a need – often an urgent need – for sound objective analysis which can make use of the best contemporary approaches to both politics and religion. ‘Cambridge Studies in Ideology and Religion’ is designed to meet this need.
The subject matter is global and this will be reflected in the choice both of topics and authors.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Religion and the Making of SocietyEssays in Social Theology, pp. xi - xiiPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1993