Nonverts: The Making of Ex-Christian America
Autor Stephen Bullivanten Limba Engleză Hardback – 12 apr 2023
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780197587447
ISBN-10: 0197587445
Pagini: 272
Dimensiuni: 201 x 147 x 33 mm
Greutate: 0.43 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0197587445
Pagini: 272
Dimensiuni: 201 x 147 x 33 mm
Greutate: 0.43 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
The chapters on individual nonverts are the most engaging in the book. Bullivant has an eye for good human interest stories and a talent for interviewing people.
We have been hearing for a long time about the remarkable rise of the nones. Only more recently have scholars delved deeper into the life worlds of America's growing non-religious population. Bullivant provides an accessible guided tour of the growing number of ex-religious Americans that is easy reading and unburdened by heavy theory or complicated statistics. This is the book for those looking for a smooth on-ramp to understanding the big picture facts and issues involved in this major cultural change.
We cannot understand the explosive rise of religious "nones" without understanding the rise of "nonverts." With rigor and wit, Stephen Bullivant shows us nonverts matter because our past relationships profoundly shape our present and future lives,often in divergentways. Religious nonverts commonly share quite different identities and experiences from "Cradle Nones." Just as nonverts who grew up evangelical or Catholic are unique compared to former Muslims or Mainline Protestants. Weaving togethercompelling personal stories and sweeping quantitativeanalysis, Bullivant shows us both the brilliant diversity and undeniable commonality of the formerly-religious.
Nonverts brings America's stunning rise of secularization to life. Stephen Bullivant highlights the humanity of the growing secular population in America—with equal parts brio, rigor, and humor. Many of the stories told within these pages will no doubt resonate with nonreligious readers. Religious readers will benefit from learning why so many others are deciding that religion is not for them. People who are unsure about their religious beliefs will find that their experience is more common than they might think. No matter their background, everyone who reads this book will gain a deeper understanding of how America's 'new secularists' are reshaping the cultural landscape.
In Nonverts, Stephen Bullivant threads the difficult needle of being academically rigorous, while also being accessible to a general audience. The backbone of the book is a careful melding of the statistical evidence with very personal and engaging stories of how and why people have left religion behind. It should serve as a key text for anyone who is interested in understanding secularization and its many causes and consequences.
Nonverts will serve as an indispensable guide to this shifting landscape, as well as the future of American life.
It is a very approachable book that digests a great deal of factual, statistical information and brings it to bear on the current secularizing trend in America. The result is that we have a clearer picture of the landscape.
Bullivant writes with engaging humor, and despite a number of graphs and statistics, this book is quite accessible to the average pastor or educated layperson. Generous footnotes lead the reader to more technical studies if one wishes to delve further into the data behind the author's summaries.
We have been hearing for a long time about the remarkable rise of the nones. Only more recently have scholars delved deeper into the life worlds of America's growing non-religious population. Bullivant provides an accessible guided tour of the growing number of ex-religious Americans that is easy reading and unburdened by heavy theory or complicated statistics. This is the book for those looking for a smooth on-ramp to understanding the big picture facts and issues involved in this major cultural change.
We cannot understand the explosive rise of religious "nones" without understanding the rise of "nonverts." With rigor and wit, Stephen Bullivant shows us nonverts matter because our past relationships profoundly shape our present and future lives,often in divergentways. Religious nonverts commonly share quite different identities and experiences from "Cradle Nones." Just as nonverts who grew up evangelical or Catholic are unique compared to former Muslims or Mainline Protestants. Weaving togethercompelling personal stories and sweeping quantitativeanalysis, Bullivant shows us both the brilliant diversity and undeniable commonality of the formerly-religious.
Nonverts brings America's stunning rise of secularization to life. Stephen Bullivant highlights the humanity of the growing secular population in America—with equal parts brio, rigor, and humor. Many of the stories told within these pages will no doubt resonate with nonreligious readers. Religious readers will benefit from learning why so many others are deciding that religion is not for them. People who are unsure about their religious beliefs will find that their experience is more common than they might think. No matter their background, everyone who reads this book will gain a deeper understanding of how America's 'new secularists' are reshaping the cultural landscape.
In Nonverts, Stephen Bullivant threads the difficult needle of being academically rigorous, while also being accessible to a general audience. The backbone of the book is a careful melding of the statistical evidence with very personal and engaging stories of how and why people have left religion behind. It should serve as a key text for anyone who is interested in understanding secularization and its many causes and consequences.
Nonverts will serve as an indispensable guide to this shifting landscape, as well as the future of American life.
It is a very approachable book that digests a great deal of factual, statistical information and brings it to bear on the current secularizing trend in America. The result is that we have a clearer picture of the landscape.
Bullivant writes with engaging humor, and despite a number of graphs and statistics, this book is quite accessible to the average pastor or educated layperson. Generous footnotes lead the reader to more technical studies if one wishes to delve further into the data behind the author's summaries.
Notă biografică
Stephen Bullivant holds professorial positions at St Mary's University, London, and the University of Notre Dame, Sydney. He has doctorates in theology (Oxford, 2009) and sociology (Warwick, 2019). His studies of contemporary nonreligiosity have received wide international coverage, including from the BBC, New York Times, Economist, Financial Times, and Der Spiegel.