Postsecular Catholicism: Relevance and Renewal
Autor Michele Dillonen Limba Engleză Hardback – 31 mai 2018
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780190693008
ISBN-10: 0190693002
Pagini: 224
Dimensiuni: 236 x 155 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0190693002
Pagini: 224
Dimensiuni: 236 x 155 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
A revelatory, insightful and challenging perspective on American Catholicism ... it is an important contribution to the life of the Church and of the society in which the Church lives.
A much needed contribution to the understanding not only of contemporary Catholicism in postsecularity in the United States but also of the Western world more generally and of the modern papacy — Pope Francis and his two predecessors — in particular.
Dillon provides a rich account of contemporary American Catholicism, formulating profound arguments based on extensive quantitative and qualitative data. This work can thus be considered an important contribution to the body of scholarly literature on religion, secularism, and postsecularism...
I hope others will read and learn from this excellent book and join her in directly tackling these thorny issues.
An ambitious consideration of how religion -- and Catholicism in particular -- maintains relevance amidst 'secularization.' ... Postsecular Catholicism presents a rich theoretical engagement with extant quantitative data on Catholics (American Catholics, in particular) ... Postsecular Catholicism is an important and well-executed book that makes a strong case for seeing intrachurch and extrachurch processes not as separate but as intertwined.
Academic activism can take a variety of forms. In Postsecular Catholicism, Michele Dillon articulates her vision for the future of Roman Catholicism via an intriguing dialectic between sociological theories, papal statements, and surveys of Catholic life in the United States.
Postsecular Catholicism is a masterwork. Michele Dillon asks if Catholicism has the 'human, doctrinal, and institutional resources' to forge a more inclusive church and contribute to a more inclusive society. She makes us doubt it as she reviews the research by others, but when she leads us through the 2015 Synod on the Family, she shows Catholicism's potential to include, organize, and inspire despite differences. No forecast can be sure, but Dillon argues for cautious optimism and optimistic activism.
Rather than being necessarily inimical to religious commitment and discourse, Michele Dillon's deft analysis of contemporary American Catholicism demonstrates how modernity constrains, transforms and opens up new possibilities for both the Church's self-understanding and its engagement within the public sphere. Never settling for such hidebound polarities as religious or secular, tradition or modernity, and the like, Dillon offers a relentlessly nuanced and truly indispensable portrayal of the American Church.
Michele Dillon's Postsecular Catholicism brilliantly analyzes the ways Catholicism engages our current social world. Her writing is accessible and clear, without missing the complexities and tensions inherent in the work that Catholics are undertaking...Dillon's familiarity with both a postsecular landscape and her fluency in Catholic concerns and interests allow her to cogently illustrate the overlap between Catholicism and the broader social world as well as the tensions that are inherent to a postsecular Catholicism. This is a must-read for academics who study religion or civic engagement as well as involved Catholics and their leaders.
Dillon's thesis is compelling. The analysis of Pope Francis' discourse would be of particular interest to the social theory audience.
A much needed contribution to the understanding not only of contemporary Catholicism in postsecularity in the United States but also of the Western world more generally and of the modern papacy — Pope Francis and his two predecessors — in particular.
Dillon provides a rich account of contemporary American Catholicism, formulating profound arguments based on extensive quantitative and qualitative data. This work can thus be considered an important contribution to the body of scholarly literature on religion, secularism, and postsecularism...
I hope others will read and learn from this excellent book and join her in directly tackling these thorny issues.
An ambitious consideration of how religion -- and Catholicism in particular -- maintains relevance amidst 'secularization.' ... Postsecular Catholicism presents a rich theoretical engagement with extant quantitative data on Catholics (American Catholics, in particular) ... Postsecular Catholicism is an important and well-executed book that makes a strong case for seeing intrachurch and extrachurch processes not as separate but as intertwined.
Academic activism can take a variety of forms. In Postsecular Catholicism, Michele Dillon articulates her vision for the future of Roman Catholicism via an intriguing dialectic between sociological theories, papal statements, and surveys of Catholic life in the United States.
Postsecular Catholicism is a masterwork. Michele Dillon asks if Catholicism has the 'human, doctrinal, and institutional resources' to forge a more inclusive church and contribute to a more inclusive society. She makes us doubt it as she reviews the research by others, but when she leads us through the 2015 Synod on the Family, she shows Catholicism's potential to include, organize, and inspire despite differences. No forecast can be sure, but Dillon argues for cautious optimism and optimistic activism.
Rather than being necessarily inimical to religious commitment and discourse, Michele Dillon's deft analysis of contemporary American Catholicism demonstrates how modernity constrains, transforms and opens up new possibilities for both the Church's self-understanding and its engagement within the public sphere. Never settling for such hidebound polarities as religious or secular, tradition or modernity, and the like, Dillon offers a relentlessly nuanced and truly indispensable portrayal of the American Church.
Michele Dillon's Postsecular Catholicism brilliantly analyzes the ways Catholicism engages our current social world. Her writing is accessible and clear, without missing the complexities and tensions inherent in the work that Catholics are undertaking...Dillon's familiarity with both a postsecular landscape and her fluency in Catholic concerns and interests allow her to cogently illustrate the overlap between Catholicism and the broader social world as well as the tensions that are inherent to a postsecular Catholicism. This is a must-read for academics who study religion or civic engagement as well as involved Catholics and their leaders.
Dillon's thesis is compelling. The analysis of Pope Francis' discourse would be of particular interest to the social theory audience.
Notă biografică
Michele Dillon is Class of 1944 Professor of Sociology at the University of New Hampshire.