Salvation goods and Canonization Logic : On two Popular Cults of Southern Italy
Details
Serval ID
serval:BIB_208A60328F0A
Type
A part of a book
Publication sub-type
Chapter: chapter ou part
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Salvation goods and Canonization Logic : On two Popular Cults of Southern Italy
Title of the book
Salvation goods and religious markets
Publisher
Lang Peter
Address of publication
Berne
ISBN
978-3-03911-211-1
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2008
Editor
Stolz Jörg
Series
Theory and applications
Pages
124-144
Language
english
Notes
Contents: Jörg Stolz: Introduction: A New Look at the Question of Salvation Goods and Religious Markets - Peter-Ulrich Merz-Benz: Salvation Goods and Culture Goods: An Interpretation of Max Weber - Franz Schultheis: Salvation Goods and Domination: Pierre Bourdieu's Sociology of the Religious Field - Jörg Stolz: Salvation Goods and Religious Markets: Integrating Rational Choice and Weberian Perspectives - Steve Bruce: The Social Limits on Religious Markets - Pierre-Yves Brandt: Integration or Individuation: Are the Salvation Goods Promised by First-Century Christian Preaching Still Attractive? - Silvia Mancini: Salvation Goods and the Canonization Logic: On Two Popular Cults of Southern Italy - Enzo Pace: Salvation Goods, the Gift Economy and Charismatic Concern - Jean-Pierre Bastian: The New Religious Economy of Latin America - Terry Rey: Worthiness as Spiritual Capital: Theorizing Little Haiti's Religious Market - Véronique Altglas: Indian Gurus and the Quest for Self-perfection Among the Educated Middle-Classes - Maya Burger: What is the Price of Salvation? The Exchange of Salvation Goods between India and the West - Jean-François Mayer: Salvation Goods and the Religious Market in the Cultic Milieu.
Abstract
(Summary of the production) The idea that religion has to succeed in a «market», selling «salvation goods», has proved to be extremely attractive to scholars in sociology and the study of religion. Max Weber used the term «salvation good» to compare different religious traditions. Pierre Bourdieu employed the term in order to analyze «religious economy». And recently, an American group of researchers advocating «rational choice of religion» put the theme at the forefront of current debates.
This book - the fruit of an International Congress in Lausanne in April 2005 - brings together leading specialists in the fields of sociology and the study of religion who discuss the terms «salvation goods» (or religious goods) and «religious market». The authors test the applicability of these concepts by using specific examples and they either deliberately advocate or criticize Weberian, Bourdieusian or rational-choice perspectives.
This book - the fruit of an International Congress in Lausanne in April 2005 - brings together leading specialists in the fields of sociology and the study of religion who discuss the terms «salvation goods» (or religious goods) and «religious market». The authors test the applicability of these concepts by using specific examples and they either deliberately advocate or criticize Weberian, Bourdieusian or rational-choice perspectives.
Keywords
Religion, market, salvation goods, religious goods, rational choice of religion,
Create date
19/02/2008 16:22
Last modification date
20/08/2019 12:56