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A01=Melania Calestani
A01=Rachel Brown
A01=Sheryl Reimer-Kirkham
A01=Sonya Sharma
Author_Melania Calestani
Author_Rachel Brown
Author_Sheryl Reimer-Kirkham
Author_Sonya Sharma
Category=MQ
Category=QRVJ2
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain

Product details

  • ISBN 9780228001645
  • Weight: 454g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 20 Aug 2020
  • Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
  • Publication City/Country: CA
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Healthcare settings are notoriously complex places where life and death co-exist, and where suffering is an everyday occurrence, giving rise to existential questions. The full range of society's diversity is reflected in patients and staff. Increasing religious and ethnic plurality, alongside decades of secularizing trends, is bringing new attention to how religion and nonreligion are expressed in public spaces. Through critical ethnographic research in Vancouver and London, Prayer as Transgression? reveals how prayer occurs in hospitals, long-term care facilities, and community-based clinics in a variety of forms and circumstances. Prayer occurs quietly on the edges of day-to-day healthcare provision and in designated sacred spaces. Some requests for prayer, however, interrupt and transgress the clinical machinery of a hospital, such as when a patient asks for prayer from the chaplain while the operating room waits. With contributions by researchers, healthcare practitioners, and chaplains, the authors consider how prayer transgresses the clinical priorities that mark healthcare, opening up ways to think differently about institutional norms and social structures. They show how prayer highlights trends of secularization and sacralization in healthcare settings. They also consider the ambivalences about prayer arising from staff and patients' varied views on religion and spirituality, and their associated ethical concerns amidst clinical and workload demands. A window onto religion in the public sphere, Prayer as Transgression? tells much about how people live well together, even in the face of personal crises and fragilities, suffering, diversity, and social change.
Sheryl Reimer-Kirkham, dean and professor of nursing at Trinity Western University, teaches health policy, qualitative research, knowledge translation, and health leadership. Sonya Sharma is associate professor of sociology at Kingston University London. Rachel Brown is adjunct professor in the Religion, Culture and Society program at the University of Victoria. Melania Calestani is an anthropologist and a lecturer at Kingston University London and St George's, University of London, in midwifery and clinical research.

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