Journal Article10.1525/RAC.2002.12.2.249
Religion, Community, and Place: Locating the Transcendent
15
TL;DR: In this article, the authors highlight the interplay of physical and social space and its effect on religious identity and everyday religious practices in the contemporary United States and highlight some promising areas for future research.
read more
Abstract: In its social dimensions, religion is a phenomenon of "place." Place has multiple dimensions, including both a physical space and a social space. As people move through physical space, such as through immigration
and other forms of geographic mobility, their religious practices go with them. However, these practices are necessarily adapted to new settings, new cultures, and new generations. Similarly, when groups
confront new or changing social spaces, their encounters with others, often of other religions, affects the social dimensions of their own religious practices and identity. This essay reviews recent books
in sociology and history focused in one way or another on dimensions of religion, place, and community in the contemporary United States. Organizing the themes into those of "immigration," "community,"
and "geography," the essay highlights the interplay of physical and social space and its effect on religious identity and everyday religious practices. In contrast to those accounts of contemporary
religion that see the Internet as both metaphor and medium for a new disembodied religious consciousness, these books show how specific and situated religion is in social life. Immigrants practice familiar
rites in new settings and give new meanings to familiar practices and rituals. Those who are not technically immigrants but socially and geographically mobile similarly re-construct their religious lives,
shaping them to their new places as they change their new settings with their practices and institutions. These dimensions of mobility, community,and physical space come together in cities——where urban
and pluralist landscapes often put religious communities side-by-side with those they consider religiously "other." By thematizing, highlighting, and examining these books for accounts of religion and
place, the essay concludes with some thoughts about promising areas for future research.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Creating an American Islam: Thoughts on Religion, Identity and Place
TL;DR: The authors argue that there is an American Islam being created, a version of Islam that aligns with the contemporary United States both organizationally and culturally, and that this faith formation is connected to the immigration of Muslims to the United States since the 1965 changes in immigration laws.
Religion and Regional Culture: Embedding Religious Commitment within Place
TL;DR: This paper found that the tension religious groups experience with their surroundings partly depends on local contexts and that certain types of local contexts may generate more tension, such as regions in which the non-religiously affiliated constitute the majority of the population.
A Theological Inquiry Regarding the Practice of the Eucharist in Cyberspace
Janice Lynn Duce
- 01 Jan 2013
TL;DR: In this article, a case study of a faith community who met with controversy after the group shared the Eucharist in cyberspace was presented. But the authors concluded that there was a theological warrant for adapting the eucharist to the Internet for a legitimate practice that could fulfill the religious and theological purposes sought by a networked community.
References
•Book
Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism
Benedict R. O'g. Anderson
- 01 Jan 1983
TL;DR: In this paper, Anderson examines the creation and global spread of the 'imagined communities' of nationality and explores the processes that created these communities: the territorialisation of religious faiths, the decline of antique kingship, the interaction between capitalism and print, the development of vernacular languages-of-state, and changing conceptions of time.
25.7K
Imagined communities: Reflections on the origin and spread of nationalism
TL;DR: In this paper, Imagined communities: Reflections on the origin and spread of nationalism are discussed. And the history of European ideas: Vol. 21, No. 5, pp. 721-722.
16.3K
•Book
Give Me That Online Religion
Brenda E. Brasher
- 01 Jan 2001
TL;DR: In this paper, Brasher explores the meaning of electronic faith and the future of traditional traditional religion and argues that religion's move to the online world does not mean technology's triumph over faith, but rather it assures religion's place in the wired universe, along with commerce and communications - meeting the spiritual demands of Internet generations to come.
361