RELIGION AND GLOBALIZATION. Outlinedocx
RELIGION AND GLOBALIZATION. Outlinedocx
RELIGION AND GLOBALIZATION. Outlinedocx
What is Religion?
Religion is a fundamental set of beliefs and practices generally agreed upon by a
group of people. These set of beliefs concern the cause, nature and purpose of the universe,
involve devotional and spiritual disturbances.
I. CROSS DISCIPLINARY CONSIDERATIONS
The study of religion is an inter- or cross- disciplinary area of inquiry (Crawford
2007). As such it has not always been successfully incorporated into social scientific disciplines.
Major Scholarly Associations
American Academy of Religion (AAR)
Society for the Scientific Study of Religion (SSSR) – 1948
Association for Sociology of Religion (ASR) – 1938
American Sociological Association’s (ASA) Sociology of Religion Section –
1994
Secularization
It is understood as a shift in the overall frameworks of human condition; it makes it
possible for people to have a choice between belief and non – belief in a manner hitherto
unknown.
Debate over Secularization
Social Scientists have heatedly debated the scope, nature, extent and parameters
of secularization in an effort to unveil the overall patterns and/or trajectories of the
modern world.
Grace Davies notion of “Viscarious Religion”
Rodney Starks’ National Choice Perspective
TWO BROAD STREAMS OF IDEAS CONCERNING SECULARIZATION
1. There is the notion of post – secular society, originally put forward by Jurgen Habermas
> POST SECULARITY – a contemporary phase in modern societies, whereby religion makes a
return to the public sphere from where it was cast out during the era of modernity.
>RELIGIOUS FUNDAMENTALISM – Grace Davies coined the phrase “Believing without
belonging” to account for the simultaneous public “flagging” of religious belief that is not
matched by religious practice.
2. Secularism is seen as an active project that is articulated alongside, the Western Modernity of
the post – 1500 world.
>SECULARISM – is a multi – faceted movement that has caused the onset of secularization in
Western Societies, secularization no longer occurs inexorably as a result of broader cultural,
economic and political changes but rather is the outcome of social action.
>Casanova (2006):
-Suggests refining secularization and addressing Eurocentric biases in the framing of that
debate.
-Future revisions of the secularization paradigm have to take into account the construction of
both sides of the secular – religious dichotomy.
The secularization paradigm has been constructed on the basis of the historical
trajectories of a selective group of Western Nations, while ignoring non – Western
religion.
There is a strong scholarly presence in the study of religion and the majority of the social
scientists working in the field are pre – occupied with the study of Europe and North
America.
Riesebrodt and Konieczny (2010) argue that the sociology of religion “must overcome its
rampant parochialism.”
Western Social Theory – based on the themes of modernity and secularity and has
ignored even non – Western branches of Christianity.