Religion and Sport: The Meeting of Sacred and Profane
By (Author) Charles S. Prebish
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th December 1992
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
306.6
Hardback
264
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
510g
Prebish examines sport as a religious experience and argues that sport has become an American religion. The first section of the work contains three chapters that provide a definitional, theoretical and methodological frame for examining sport as religion. The five chapters that follow, each written by an authority in the field, treat different aspects of the religious dimension of sport. These chapters represent the most important writings on sport as a religious experience, and each author offers a full and thoughtful discussion rather than a cursory overview. A final chapter by Prebish closes the work. The first chapter of the book challenges traditional assumptions about religion and encourages the reader to reconsider what religion is. The second chapter examines the difficulty of defining sport, and the third probes the close relationship between sport and religion. The anthology that follows contains chapters that examine religion and sport from sociological, historical, theological, philosophical and psychological perspectives. A concluding bibliography lists material for further reading.
Recommended for purchase by academic and large public libraries as one of the few monographs dealing specifically with this topic.-Popular Culture in Libraries
"Recommended for purchase by academic and large public libraries as one of the few monographs dealing specifically with this topic."-Popular Culture in Libraries
CHARLES S. PREBISH is Associate Professor of Religious Studies at The Pennsylvania State University. An authority on Oriental religions, he has authored or edited six books on Buddhism. His many articles have appeared in journals such as Religious Studies Review, Journal of Asian Studies, History of Religions, and Journal of the American Oriental Society. He has also contributed material to the Abingdon Dictionary of Living Religions (1981), The Encyclopedia of Religion (1987), and the Encyclopedia of the American Religious Experience (1988).