After Secularization?
Top Cited Papers
- 1 August 2008
- journal article
- Published by Annual Reviews in Annual Review of Sociology
- Vol. 34 (1) , 55-85
- https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.soc.34.040507.134740
Abstract
The study of secularization appears to be entering a new phase. Supply-side theories that focus exclusively on religious participation and membership seem too one-dimensional. But classical theories of secularization contain generalized and teleological premises that are at odds with the complexities of empirical reality and the historical record. This review seeks to map a new way forward and identify key obstacles and goals. It begins by retracing the development of secularization theory within sociology and the genealogy of the secularization concept within presociological discourse. It then reviews what is and is not known about secularization in the West, noting the limitations of the data and biases in research. The article further argues for comparative and historical approaches that incorporate non-Christian religions and non-Western regions. The social scientific literature that critically reassesses the relationship between diverse religious movements, secularisms, and liberal democracies presen...Keywords
This publication has 88 references indexed in Scilit:
- Islam Resetting the European Agenda?Public Culture, 2006
- The secularisation decade: what the 1960s have done to the study of religious historyPublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,2003
- The "Party Period" RevisitedJournal of American History, 1999
- Towards an Integrated Perspective of the Processes Related to the Descriptive Concept of SecularizationSociology of Religion, 1999
- DEREGULATING RELIGION: THE ECONOMICS OF CHURCH AND STATEEconomic Inquiry, 1997
- Indian Secularism and Its Critics: Some ReflectionsThe Review of Politics, 1997
- The Invention of the Ethnocultural InterpretationThe American Historical Review, 1994
- La genèse de l'approche moderne de la sécularisation: une analyse en histoire de la sociologieSocial Compass, 1992
- How the Upstart Sects Won America: 1776-1850Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 1989
- Protestantism and the Working Class in Imperial GermanyEuropean Studies Review, 1982