The Wiley Blackwell companion to the study of religion
by
 
Segal, Robert Alan, editor.

Title
The Wiley Blackwell companion to the study of religion

Author
Segal, Robert Alan, editor.

ISBN
9781119092797
 
9781119092766
 
9781119092780

Edition
Second edition.

Physical Description
1 online resource (xvi, 459 pages).

Series
Wiley Blackwell companions to religion
 
Wiley-Blackwell companions to religion.

Contents
Approaches. Anthropology of Religion / Fiona Bowie -- Economics of Religion / Rodney Stark -- Literature and Religion / Eric Ziolkowski -- Phenomenology of Religion / Thomas Ryba -- Philosophy of Religion / Charles Taliaferro -- Psychology of Religion / Roderick Main -- Sociology of Religion / Titus Hjelm -- Theology / Ian S Markham -- Topics. Body / Yudit Kornberg Greenberg -- Cognitive Science / Jesper Sorensen -- Comparative Method / Paul Roscoe -- Death and Afterlife / Douglas J Davies -- Emotion / Tony Milligan -- Esotericism / Karl Baier -- Ethics / G Scott Davis -- Functionalism / Robert A Segal -- Fundamentalism / Henry Munson -- Globalization / Michael Wilkinson -- History / Robert A Yelle -- Law / Winnifred Fallers Sullivan -- Magic / Kocku Stuckrad -- Modernism and Postmodernism / Paul-Francois Tremlett -- Music / Guy L Beck -- Myth / Robert A Segal -- Nationalism / Mark Juergensmeyer -- Pilgrimage / Simon Coleman -- Ritual / Catherine Bell, Jens Kreinath -- Science / Ralph O'Connor -- Secularization / Steve Bruce -- Sex and Gender / Ivan Strenski -- Terror and Violence / Lorne L Dawson.

Abstract
"The first edition of the Blackwell Companion to the Study of Religion appeared all the way back in 2006. The second edition, now named the Wiley-Blackwell Companion, is revamped. The first edition consisted of twenty-four entries. The second consists of thirty-one entries. The differences are major. There are new entries: on cognitive science, emotion, esotericism, functionalism, globalization, history, law, music, science, sex and gender, and terror and violence. Three entries from the first edition have been dropped: heaven and hell, holy men/holy women, and mysticism-all dropped for idiosyncratic reasons. The comparative method has been switched from an approach to a topic. Five of the entries have new authors. One entry, that on ritual, has been retained unaltered because of the author's sad death in the interim, but it now has a supplementary updating of the subject. All but one of the existing entries have been substantially revised. When the first edition appeared, I was a member of a department of theology and religious studies. Two years ago my department decided to drop almost all of religious studies and to rename itself sheer "divinity." What the difference is between divinity and theology I have no idea. But the exclusion of religions other than Christianity from "divinity"-or even the past needed addition of "religious studies" to "theology"-is not quite a universal terminology. In the United States, not least at esteemed venues like the Harvard Divinity School, the Yale Divinity School, and the University of Chicago Divinity School, "divinity" covers all religions, not just one religion. Whatever the difference between an approach to, say, Islam in a divinity school and an approach to it in a department of religious studies, Islam is assumed to be a fit topic of study for both."-- Provided by publisher.

Local Note
John Wiley and Sons

Subject Term
Religion.
 
Religion -- Study and teaching.
 
Religion -- Research.
 
Religion -- Étude et enseignement.
 
Religion -- Recherche.
 
religion (discipline)
 
Religion
 
Religion -- Research
 
Religion -- Study and teaching

Added Author
Segal, Robert Alan,
 
Roubekas, Nickolas P. (Nickolas Panayiotis), 1979-

Electronic Access
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/book/10.1002/9781119092797


LibraryMaterial TypeItem BarcodeShelf Number[[missing key: search.ChildField.HOLDING]]Status
Online LibraryE-Book596273-1001BL48 .W55 2021Wiley E-Kitap Koleksiyonu