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9780199757121

The Sacred Is the Profane The Political Nature of "Religion"

by ;
  • ISBN13:

    9780199757121

  • ISBN10:

    0199757127

  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 2012-11-29
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press

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Summary

The Sacred Is the Profanecollects nine essays written over several years by William Arnal and Russell McCutcheon, specialists in two very different areas of the field (one, a scholar of Christian origins and the other working on the history of the modern study of religion). They share a convergent perspective: not simply that both the category and concept "religion" is a construct, something that we cannot assume to be "natural" or universal, but also that the ability to think and act "religiously" is, quite specifically, a modern, political category in its origins and effects, the mere by-product of modern secularism. These collected essays, substantially rewritten for this volume, advance current scholarly debates on secularism-debates which, the authors argue, insufficiently theorize the sacred/secular, church/state, and private/public binaries by presupposing religion (often under the guise of such terms as "religiosity," "faith," or "spirituality") to historically precede the nation-state. The essays return, again and again, to the question of what "religion"--word and concept--accomplishes, now, for those who employ it, whether at the popular, political, or scholarly level. The focus here for two writers from seemingly different fields is on the efficacy, costs, and the tactical work carried out by dividing the world between religious and political, church and state, sacred and profane. As the essays make clear, this is no simple matter. Part of the reason for the incoherence and at the same time the stubborn persistence of both the word and idea of "religion" is precisely its multi-faceted nature, its plurality, its amenability to multiple and often self-contradictory uses. Offering an argument that builds as they are read, these papers explore these uses, including the work done by positing a human orientation to "religion," the political investment in both the idea of religion and the academic study of religion, and the ways in which the field of religious studies works to shape, and stumbles against, its animating conception.

Author Biography


William E. Arnal is Associate Professor of Religious Studies at the University of Regina.

Russell T. McCutcheon is Professor of Religious Studies at the University of Alabama.

Table of Contents

Sources
Introduction: On the Persistence of Imagining Religion
On the Definition of Religion
Words, Words, Wordbooks, Or Everything Old is New Again
Contemporary Reinventions of Religion: Disney and the Academy
''Just Follow the Money'': The Cold War, the Humanistic Study of Religion, and the Fallacy of Insufficient Cynicism
Will Your Cognitive Anchor Hold in the Storms of Culture?
Maps of Nothing in Particular: Religion as a Cross-Cultural Taxon?
''They Licked the Platter Clean'': On the Co-Dependency of the Religious and the Secular
The Origins of Christianity Within, and Without, ''Religion'': An Exploration and Application
Afterword
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Table of Contents provided by Publisher. All Rights Reserved.

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