The shape of spirituality : the public significance of a new religious formation / edited by Dick Houtman and Galen Watts.

Other author Houtman, Dick, editor.
Other author Watts, Galen, editor.
Other author Brown, Candy Gunther.
Format Book
PublicationNew York : Columbia University Press, [2024]
Descriptionpages cm
Subjects

Contents Introduction: spirituality -- privatized pseudo-religion? / Galen Watts and Dick Houtman -- How spirituality grew up and out of Christianity / Linda Woodhead -- The cultic milieu and the spiritual turn: the need for theoretical revision / Colin Campbell -- Holistic healing and the re-establishment of religion in the United States / Candy Gunther Brown -- Spiritualizing therapy: how psychologists use spirituality to counter the hyperindividualistic spirit of therapy / Michael Pages and Orly Tal -- The spiritual impulse in Silicon Valley: a content and discourse analysis of Wired Magazine, 2001-2020 / Paul K. McClure and Christopher M. Pieper -- Lagged identities and the underestimated civic significance of spirituality / Evan Stewart, Tim Dacey, and Jaime Kucinskas -- When the spiritual is political: self-realization and the quest for social justice / Galen Watts -- A startling alliance? Spirituality, populism, and antivaccination protest / Dick Houtman and Stef Aupers -- Conspirituality: an (un)happy marriage of conspiracy theories and spirituality? / Jaron Harambam.
Abstract "Scholars and public figures alike have noted that, while the West seems to be in the throes of secularization, other puzzling developments have simultaneously taken place. Foremost among these is the recent turn toward spirituality. What does it mean to be "spiritual but not religious"? And more important, what does it mean for liberal democracies that this phenomenon has become increasingly prevalent since the 1960s? The conventional answer, espoused by most sociologists of religion, is that "spirituality" is a basically meaningless term that lacks cultural coherence or institutional support and thus holds little public significance; previous work has for the most part examined its effects on individuals or at best on the declining affiliation with religious denominations. This authoritative volume, grounded in a novel theoretical approach, radically challenges these views, demonstrating that the spiritual turn has also had a profound influence on the public sphere in a number of areas. Comprising original chapters from the leading sociologists of spirituality in North America and Western Europe including Candy Gunther Brown (Indiana), Jaime Kucinskas (Hamilton), Colin Campbell (York), and Linda Woodhead (UCL), the book makes a convincing case that Western spirituality not only signals a distinct new religious tradition but also has been increasingly institutionalized-in spheres and sites as diverse as medicine, the workplace, Silicon Valley, and political activism on both left and right. Thus, contrary to popular opinion, far from being publicly insignificant, spirituality resides at the center of Western social and political life in the twenty-first century"-- Provided by publisher.
Bibliography noteIncludes bibliographical references.
Issued in other formOnline version: Shape of spirituality New York : Columbia University Press, [2024] 9780231561372
LCCN 2024010782
ISBN9780231216852
ISBN9780231216845 (hardback)
ISBN023121684X
ISBN0231216858
ISBN(ebook)