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Religion Matters: How Sociology Helps Us Understand Religion in Our World focuses on religion's interplay with broader society, introducing students to the basic questions, ideas, and methods with which sociologists have analyzed the relationship between religion and society. Since the first edition, religion as a social force has changed dramatically in its content and consequences for the world. In this new edition, the authors update the foundational lenses used to understand religion's multiple roles in society, assess the impact of technology and social media on religion and faith, draw…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Religion Matters: How Sociology Helps Us Understand Religion in Our World focuses on religion's interplay with broader society, introducing students to the basic questions, ideas, and methods with which sociologists have analyzed the relationship between religion and society. Since the first edition, religion as a social force has changed dramatically in its content and consequences for the world. In this new edition, the authors update the foundational lenses used to understand religion's multiple roles in society, assess the impact of technology and social media on religion and faith, draw further reflection from contemporary studies of religion and gender, and add a new chapter examining the increasing amount of religious polarization in the United States and throughout the world. With new illustrations and connections that make this readable textbook more accessible and relevant for today's student, the second edition of Religion Matters remains a perfect counterpart for introductory courses concerned with the sociological study of religion.
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Autorenporträt
William A. Mirola is former Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences and Professor of Sociology at Marian University in Indianapolis, IN. His publications include Redeeming Time: Protestantism and the Eight-Hour Movement in Chicago; Religion and Class in America; and Sociology of Religion: A Reader. Michael O. Emerson is Professor and Department Head of Sociology at the University of Illinois Chicago. He studies religion, race, and the many intersections of these. He is the author of 15 books and over 100 other publications. Sue Monahan is Associate Provost and Professor of Sociology at Western Oregon University. She is co-editor of Sociology of Religion: A Reader and has published articles and reviews in Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, Review of Religious Research, Sociology of Religion and Contemporary Sociology.