Religion and Social Theory 2/e

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTDISBN: 9780803985698

Price:
Sale price$164.00
Stock:
Out of Stock - Available to backorder

By Bryan S Turner
Imprint:
SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
Release Date:
Format:
PAPERBACK
Pages:
288

Request Academic Copy

Button Actions

Please copy the ISBN for submitting review copy form

Description

Bryan S. Turner is Professor of Sociology in the Asian Research Institute (ARI) at the National University of Singapore. Previously he was Professor of Sociology in the Faculty of Social and Political Sciences at the University of Cambridge from 1998-2005. His research interests include globalization and religion, concentrating on such issues as religious conflict and the modern state, religious authority and electronic information, religious, consumerism and youth cultures, human rights and religion, the human body, medical change, and religious cosmologies. He is Joint Chief Editor of the journal Citizenship Studies and serves on the editorial boards of several prestigious journals.

Introduction to the Second Edition Other Religions Social Cement Social Opium Religion as Exchange Religion as Social Control Feudalism and Religion Individualism, Capitalism and Religion Religion and Political Legitimacy Religion and Global Politics cular Bodies and the Dance of Death Appendix What is Religion?

`This perceptive and wide-ranging book embraces a number of distinctive themes... one of the most stimulating books in the field for a long time' - British Journal of Sociology `Turner writes... with much more analytical penetration and sensitivity to historical variation and conjuncture than is to be found in the vast majority of sociological writings of our time on the theme of religion' - Theory, Culture & Society `The most important theoretical contribution to the sociology of religion in the last two decades. It presents a challenge to many of the prevailing assumptions in that field and suggests ways in which it could regain the position of centrality that it occupied in the work of classical sociologists such as Weber and Durkheim' - Professor Kenneth Thompson

You may also like

Recently viewed