"Mourning Religion is an interesting and engaging collection that makes a substantial contribution to the area of religious studies. It develops Peter Homans’s well-known theory about the emergence of psychoanalysis as a product of successful cultural mourning of religion by investigating the vicissitudes of mourning and melancholia in a variety of situations related to religion. Until now, the interdisciplinary arenas of religious studies and cultural studies were lacking a book that explores the implications of Homans’s thesis. This book fills the gap."
—Naomi Goldenberg, Professor of Religious Studies, University of Ottawa
 

Mourning Religion

Edited by William B. Parsons, Diane Jonte-Pace, and Susan E. Henking
288 pages, 6 x 9
Cloth 978-0-8139-2745-9 • $55.00
Paper 978-0-8139-2746-6 • $19.50
Studies in Religion and Culture
October 2008


Late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century theorists such as Freud, Durkheim, Weber, and Marx built their intellectual edifices on what they thought would be the remains or ruins of religion in the wake of modernization. But today the decline and disappearance of religion can no longer be simply assumed. In the face of contemporary entanglements of religion and violence, the establishment of meaning and morality remains troubling; the experience of loss and change remains, paradoxically, constant; and new theoretical perspectives--feminism, race studies, postcolonial studies, queer studies, postmodernism--have emerged, challenging the works that mourned religion and created meaning in earlier periods. The effects of this ongoing experience of mourning and symbolic loss on culture, on subjectivity, and on the academic disciplines of religious studies, though immense, are poorly understood and underinterpreted.

In order to correct this lacuna in scholarly thought, this volume brings together a notable group of scholars who examine the ways in which recent cultural transformations inform the place of religion in the modern world. Methodologically, they represent the intersection of religious studies and the social scientific study of religion, bringing the disciplines of psychology, sociology, and anthropology into this dialogue.



William B. Parsons is Associate Professor in the Department of Religious Studies at Rice University. He and Diane Jonte-Pace coedited Religion and Psychology: Mapping the Terrain. Diane Jonte-Pace is Vice Provost for Undergraduate Studies and Professor in the Department of Religious Studies at Santa Clara University. Susan E. Henking is Professor in the Department of Religious Studies at Hobart and William Smith Colleges. She is the coeditor of Que(e)rying Religion.


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