by StephenSharot (Author)
A Sociology of World Religions presents a comparative analysis of the world's religions, focusing on the differences and interrelationships between religious elites and lay masses. In each case the volume contextualizes how the relationships between these two religious forms fit within, and are influenced by, the wider socio-political environment.
After introducing the book's major themes, the volume introduces and builds upon an analysis of Weber's model of religious action, drawing on Durkheim, Marxist scholars, and the work of contemporary sociologists and anthropolgists. The following chapters each focus on major religious cultures, including Hinduism, Buddhism, Catholicism, Protestantism, Islam, Judaism, and the religions of China and Japan. This ambitious project is the first to offer a comparison of the popular, or folk, forms of religion around the world.
Sharot's accessible introductions to each of the world religions, synthesizing a vast literature on popular religion from sociology, anthropology, and historians of religion, make the project ideal for course use. His comparative approach and original analyses will prove rewarding even for experts on each of the world religions.
Format: Paperback
Pages: 352
Publisher: New York University Press
Published: 31 Aug 2001
ISBN 10: 0814798055
ISBN 13: 9780814798058
Book Overview: First book to offer a comparison of the popular, or folk, forms of religion around the world
The many books on the world's religions typically emphasize doctrine ( religion in the air ), while sociology of religion books typically emphasize behavior (religion `on the ground'). Stephen Sharot does both in this masterful study, the product of many years of research. His book should have great classroom potential as well as a prominent place on religion scholars' bookshelves.
-Phillip Hammond D. Mackenzie Brown,Professor of Religious Studies, Department of Religious Studies, University of California Santa BarbaraSharot makes a substantial contribution to the maturation of the comparative sociology of religion. A distinctive feature of the book is its accent on popular religion, a much studied phenomenon these days.
-Martin MartyThis book belongs in libraries of all sorts. It strikes me as a paradigm of analytical comprehension that should set a standard for the field.
-Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion,September 2002..the book reads smoothly and continues to engage the reader's attention. This book belongs in libraries of all sorts. It strikes me as a paradigm of analytical comprehension that should set a standard for the field.
-Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion,September 2002A triumphant success-of well-marshalled resources, careful argument, and lucid discussion. Sharot brings to his work a daunting-indeed dazzling-armoury of cross-cultural scholarship, impressively matched by rigorous, sustained and penetrating analysis. The book is not only a monumental contribution to our understanding of religion world-wide, but is also an exemplary exploitation of the insights of sociological analysis when applied to widely diverse cultural phenomena.
-Bryan Wilson,Emeritus Fellow of All Souls, University of Oxford, U.K., and author of Religion in Sociological Perspective