Available Formats
Is God Back: Reconsidering the New Visibility of Religion
By (Author) Titus Hjelm
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
2nd July 2015
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Sociology
305.6094
Paperback
296
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
455g
Is God Back Reconsidering the New Visibility of Religion examines the shifting boundary between religion and the public sphere in Europe and the Middle East. Asking what the 'new visibility of religion' means and challenging simplistic notions of living in a 'post-secular' age, the chapters explore how religion is contested and renegotiated in the public sphere or rather, in different publics and the effects of these struggles on society, state and religion itself. Whereas religion arguably never went away in the USA, the re-emergence of public religion is a European phenomenon. Is God Back provides timely case studies from Europe, as well as extending to the Middle East, where fledgling democracies are struggling to create models of governance that stem from the European secular model, but which need to be able to accommodate a much more public form of religiosity. Discussions include the new visibility of neo-Pagan and Native Faith groups in Europe, Evangelical Christians and Church teaching on sexuality in the UK, and Islamic social Movements in the Arab world. Drawing from empirical and theoretical research on religion and national identity, religion and media, church-state relationships, and religion and welfare, Is God Back is a rich source for students and scholars interested in the changing face of public religion in the modern world, including those studying the sociology of religion, social policy, and theology.
[I]t is [the] eclecticism that is one of the main appeals of the book. There is something to interest everyone, and younger researchers or those new to the field of sociology of religion will find it particularly helpful. * Sociology of Religion *
This collection is outstanding: lively, timely, wide-ranging, probing and sceptical about woolly notions of religions return to the public sphere. Its a must-read book for anyone with interests in religion as a social fact. -- James A. Beckford, Professor Emeritus of Sociology, University of Warwick, UK
Titus Hjelm is Lecturer in Finnish Society and Culture at University College London, UK.