Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Acknowledgment
- Part One Religion as a Field of Sociological Knowledge
- Part Two Religion and Social Change
- Part Three Religion and the Life Course
- Part Four Religion and Social Identity
- 16 Religious Identities and Religious Institutions
- 17 Religion and the New Immigrants
- 18 A Journey of the “Straight Way” or the “Roundabout Path”
- 19 Beyond the Synagogue Walls
- 20 Dis/location
- Part Five Religion, Political Behavior, and Public Culture
- Part Six Religion and Socioeconomic Inequality
- References
- Index
19 - Beyond the Synagogue Walls
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Acknowledgment
- Part One Religion as a Field of Sociological Knowledge
- Part Two Religion and Social Change
- Part Three Religion and the Life Course
- Part Four Religion and Social Identity
- 16 Religious Identities and Religious Institutions
- 17 Religion and the New Immigrants
- 18 A Journey of the “Straight Way” or the “Roundabout Path”
- 19 Beyond the Synagogue Walls
- 20 Dis/location
- Part Five Religion, Political Behavior, and Public Culture
- Part Six Religion and Socioeconomic Inequality
- References
- Index
Summary
For most of the twentieth century, the study of religion in the United States has focused on institutionally and denominationally based religious groups, behaviors, and beliefs. By keeping institutional religion at the center of our research, students of religion have limited the understanding of the various meanings that individuals may attribute to their religious practices. An institutional focus marginalizes the diverse and syncretic nature of individual religious behavior. Recently, sociologists and anthropologists of religion have begun to recognize that religious practices and expression are not limited to the sanctioned forms and loci provided by the major traditions and denominations. Nor are they fully encompassed by the studies of “new religious movements” that dominated the sociological study of religion in the 1970s and 1980s. Recent volumes edited by Robert Orsi (1999) and David Hall (1997), for example, direct attention away from institutional religion to the study of “lived” religion, and religion outside of institutions, that is, the various and complex ways that people act to create meaning and new practices within the fabric of their everyday lives. By adapting a radically empiricist methodology, the study of lived religion focuses on those subtle ways that people “in particular places and times, live in, with, through and against the religious idioms available to them in culture – all the idioms, including (often enough) those not explicitly ‘their own’” (Hall 1997: 7).
The practice of religion is not fixed, frozen, and limited, but can be spontaneous, innovative, and assembled by cultural bricolage (Orsi 1997).
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- Handbook of the Sociology of Religion , pp. 261 - 275Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003
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