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Reading Religion in Text and Context
A01=Peter Collins
Author_Peter Collins
Category=JH
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Catholic Social Teaching
Civil Society
Coroner's Court
Coroner’s Court
dignitatis
Dignitatis Humanae
embodiment in religion
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Ewan Ingleby
faith and environment
Faith Group Leaders
Faith Groups
Granth Sahib
Greimassian Semiotics
humanae
Ian G. Williams
James Sweeney
Kim Knott
Late Great Planet Earth
Major World Faiths
Malcolm Gold
Nancy A. Schaefer
Nepali Groups
Nicolae Carpathia
non-Christian Faith Groups
Paul Chambers
Pentecostal Charismatic Christianity
Post-secular Positions
Project Colony
Prophet's Beard
Prophet’s Beard
religious material culture
religious semiotics
Ritual Architectural Events
ritual studies
Roman Catholic Seminaries
sacred text interpretation
Secular Pressure Groups
Seminary Context
Simon Coleman
South Asian Respondents
textuality in religious practice
UK Constituent
Vibha Arora
Vice Versa
Young Men
Product details
- ISBN 9780754654827
- Weight: 453g
- Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
- Publication Date: 21 Jun 2006
- Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Hardback
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To what extent is religion inherently textual? What might the term 'textual' mean in relation to religious faith and practice? These are the two key questions addressed by the eleven thought-provoking essays collected in this volume. Accounts of the content and structure of sacred texts are commonplace. The rather more adventurous aim of this book is to disclose (within the context of religion) the various ways in which meaning can be read of more or less obviously sacred writing and from discourses such as the body, the built and natural environment, drama and ritual.
Elisabeth Arweck is Senior Research Fellow at the Institute of Education, University of Warwick, UK. She is Editor (with Peter Clarke) of the Journal of Contemporary Religion and has published Researching New Religious Movements: Responses and Redefinitions (2006), Theorizing Faith: The Insider/Outsider Problem in the Study of Ritual (2002) with Martin Stringer, and New Religious Movements in Western Europe: An Annotated Bibliography (1997) with Peter Clarke. Peter Collins is Lecturer in Anthropology at Durham University, UK. His recent publications include Religion, Identity and Change: Perspectives on Global Transformations (2004), and Locating the Field: Space, Place and Context in Anthropology (2006), both with Simon Coleman.
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