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Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > General > General
When we think of yoga today, we envision spandex-clad, perspiring,
toned people brought together in a room filled with yoga mats and
engaged in a fitness ritual set apart from day-to-day life. Their
aim is to enhance something they all deem sacred: their bodies. In
Selling Yoga, Andrea Jain looks at the development of modern,
popular yoga and suggests that its practitioners are strategic
participants in the contemporary global market for
self-developmental products and services. Pre-colonial and early
modern yoga systems comprise esoteric techniques that aim at
transcendent states of detachment from ordinary and conventional
life. In contrast, contemporary popularized yoga aims at immediate
self-development through the enhancement of the mind-body complex
according to dominant health and fitness paradigms. Postural yoga
is prescribed not as an all-encompassing worldview or system of
practice, but as one part of self-development that provides
increased beauty and flexibility as well as reduced stress; it can
be combined with various other worldviews and practices available
in the global marketplace. However, Jain argues that yoga systems
cannot be reduced to mere commodities-that yoga is, in fact, a
religion of consumer culture. It functions as a social ritual that
removes individuals from everyday life for the sake of
self-development. Yoga brands destabilize the basic utility of yoga
commodities and assign to them new meanings that represent the
fulfillment of self-developmental needs deemed sacred in
contemporary consumer culture.
In Spirit Song: Afro-Brazilian Religious Music and Boundaries,
ethnomusicologist Marc Gidal explains how and why a multi-faith
community in southern Brazil uses music to combine and segregate
three Afro-Brazilian religions: Umbanda, Quimbanda, and Batuque.
Spirit Song will be the first book in any language about the music
of Umbanda and its close relative Quimbanda-twentieth-century
fusions of European Spiritism, Afro-Brazilian religion, and Folk
Catholicism-as well as the first publication in English about the
music of the African-derived Batuque religion and "Afro-gaucho"
identity, a local term that celebrates the contributions of African
descendants to the cowboy culture of southernmost Brazil. Combining
ethnomusicology and symbolic boundary studies, Gidal advances a
theory of musical boundary-work: the use of music to reinforce,
bridge, or blur boundaries, whether for personal, social,
spiritual, or political purposes. The Afro-gaucho religious
community uses music and rituals to varisuly promote innovation and
egalitarianism in Umbanda and Quimbanda, whereas it reinforces
musical preservation and hierarchies in Batuque. Religious and
musical leaders carefully restrict the cosmologies, ceremonial
sequences, and sung prayers of one religion from affecting the
others so as to safeguard Batuque's African heritage. Members of
disenfranchised populations have also used the religions as
vehicles for empowerment, whether based on race-ethnicity, gender,
or religious belief; and innovations in ritual music reflect this
activism. Gidal explains these points by describing and
interpreting spirit-mediumship rituals and their musical
accompaniment, drawing on the perspectives of participants, with
video and audio examples available on the book's companion website.
The first book in English to explore music in Afro-Brazilian
religions, Spirit Song is a landmark study that will be of interest
to ethnomusicologists, anthropologists, and religious studies
scholars.
St. Brigitta of Sweden (1303-73, canonized 1391) was one of the
most charismatic and influential visionaries of the later Middle
Ages. Altogether, she received some 700 revelations dealing with a
variety of subjects, from meditations on the human condition,
domestic affairs in Sweden, and ecclesiastical matters in Rome, to
revelations in praise of the Incarnation and devotion to the
Virgin. Her Revelationes, collected and ordered by her confessors,
circulated widely throughout Europe both during her lifetime and
long after her death. Many eminent individuals, including Cardinal
Juan Torqemada and Martin Luther, read and commented on her
writings, which influenced the spiritual lives of countless
individuals. Birgitta was also the founder of a new contemplative
order, which still exists. She is the patron saint of Sweden, and
in 2000 was declared (with Catherine of Siena and Edith Stein) the
first co-patroness of Europe. Interest in Birgitta's Revelationes
has grown over the past decade. Historians and theologians draw on
them for insights into late medieval spirituality, artistic
imagery, political struggles, and social life. Scholars of
literature study them to gain knowledge of rhetorical strategies
employed in late medieval texts by women. Philologists analyze them
to enhance understanding of the historical development of Latin and
medieval Swedish. Increasingly, Birgitta is also admired and
studied as a powerful female voice and prophet of reform.
Collectively, the Revelationes encapsulate the workings of an
extraordinary mind, alternating between a tender lyricism and a
grim intensity and hallucinatory imagination, mixing stereotypical
commonplaces with startling and sensational imagery, providing
enlightenment on contemporary issues and practical advice about
imminent and future events, and showing a constant devotion to the
passion of Christ and a close identification with the Virgin. This
is the second of four volumes and it contains Book IV and Book V.
Book IV includes some of Birgitta's most influential visions, with
topics ranging from the Avignon papacy and purgatory, to the
Hundred Years War. Book V, the Liber Quaestionum (Book of
Questions), takes the form of a learned dialogue between Christ and
a monk standing on a ladder fixed between heaven and earth. The
argument centers on the way in which God's providence is constantly
misunderstood and rejected by self-centered human beings. The
translation is based on the recently completed critical edition of
the Latin text and promises to be the standard English translation
of the Revelationes for years to come. It makes this important text
available to a wider audience and provides the basis for new
research on one of the foremost medieval women visionaries.
Islam's relationship to liberal-democratic politics has emerged as
one of the most pressing and contentious issues in international
affairs. This book analyzes the relationship between religion,
secularism, and liberal democracy, both theoretically and in the
context of the contemporary Muslim world. This book challenges a
widely held belief among social scientists that religious politics
and liberal-democratic development are structurally incompatible.
While there are certainly tensions between Islam and democracy --
Hashemi draws on Iran as an example -- the two are not
irreconcilable. He affirms the need for political secularism in
order for liberal democracy to flourish, and examines how Muslim
societies can develop the political secularism required for liberal
democracy when the main political, cultural and intellectual
resources that are available are religious. Hashemi argues that
democratization and liberalization do not necessarily require a
rejection or privatization of religion but do require a
reinterpretation of religious ideas about the moral basis of
legitimate political authority and individual rights. In fact, he
shows, liberal democracy in the West often developed not in strict
opposition to religious politics but in concert with it. Hashemi
argues that an indigenous theory of Muslim secularism -- similar to
what developed in the Christian West -- is possible and a necessary
requirement for the advancement of liberal democracy in Muslim
societies.
The academic study of death rose to prominence during the 1960s.
Courses on some aspect of death and dying can now be found at most
institutions of higher learning. These courses tend to stress the
psycho-social aspects of grief and bereavement, however, ignoring
the religious elements inherent to the subject. This collection is
the first to address the teaching of courses on death and dying
from a religious-studies perspective.
The book is divided into seven sections. The hope is that this
volume will not only assist teachers in religious studies
departments to prepare to teach unfamiliar and emotionally charged
material, but also help to unify a field that is now widely
scattered across several disciplines.
Damn Great Empires! offers a new perspective on the works of
William James by placing his encounter with American imperialism at
the center of his philosophical vision. This book reconstructs
James's overlooked political thought by treating his
anti-imperialist Nachlass - his speeches, essays, notes, and
correspondence on the United States' annexation of the Philippines
- as the key to the political significance of his celebrated
writings on psychology, religion, and philosophy. It shows how
James located a craving for authority at the heart of empire as a
way of life, a craving he diagnosed and unsettled through his
insistence on a modern world without ultimate foundations.
Livingston explores the persistence of political questions in
James's major works, from his writings on the self in The
Principles of Psychology to the method of Pragmatism, the study of
faith and conversion in The Varieties of Religious Experience, and
the metaphysical inquiries in A Pluralistic Universe. Against the
common view of James as a thinker who remained silent on questions
of politics, this book places him in dialogue with champions and
critics of American imperialism, from Theodore Roosevelt to W. E.
B. Du Bois, as well as a transatlantic critique of modernity, in
order to excavate James's anarchistic political vision. Bringing
the history of political thought into conversation with
contemporary debates in political theory, Damn Great Empires!
offers a fresh and original reexamination of the political
consequences of pragmatism as a public philosophy.
With the extraordinary growth of Christianity in the global south
has come the rise of "reverse missions," in which countries in
Asia, Africa, and Latin America send missionaries to re-evangelize
the West. In The Spirit Moves West, Rebecca Kim focuses on South
Korea as a case study of how non-Western missionaries evangelize
Americans, particularly white Americans. Known as the "Asian
Protestant Superpower," South Korea now sends more missionaries
abroad than any country except the United States; there are
approximately 22,000 Korean missionaries in over 160 countries.
Drawing on four years of in-depth interviews, participant
observation, and surveys of South Korea's largest
non-denominational missionary-sending agency, University Bible
Fellowship, Rebecca Kim gives us an inside look at reverse
missions. Conducting her research both in the US and South Korea,
she studies the motivations and methods of Korean evangelicals who
have sought to "bring the gospel back" to America since the 1970s.
She also explores how a mission movement from the global South
could evolve over time in the West. The Spirit Moves West is the
first empirically-grounded examination of a much-discussed
phenomenon, which concludes by considering what the future of
non-Western, especially Korean, missions will bring.
Pariah Politics breaks new ground in examining the issue of western
Islamist extremism from the perspective of government. It links
underlying causes to the capacity of governments to respond
directly and to influence others. The book contains four main
messages.
Focusing on causes, not symptoms. The book identifies four big
causal drivers: settled disadvantage, social isolation, grievance
and oppositional cultures, and the volatile dynamics of global
Islam. Governments can hope to influence the first two, using
existing and innovative policy levers. The scope to make big
changes in the latter two is severely limited.
The circle of tacit support. Action by government to counter
terrorism has relied too heavily on security policy measures to
intercept or disrupt men of violence. This emphasis is misplaced.
Though important, this fails to address the moral oxygen for
violence and confrontation that exists within Muslim communities.
Better focus and better levers. Ministers and officials need to
think and act smart. They need to push ahead with social inclusion
policies to broaden opportunity. They need to make more use of
community-based strategies to isolate extremism. They need to
promote civil society actions so that affected communities can take
control of their own reputational future. And, they desperately
need to avoid making things worse.
Reputations matter. The pariah status of western Muslims has
worsened by the fallout from terrorism. Few have anything good to
say about western Muslims; still fewer can imagine an optimistic
future. Yet earlier demonised groups, such as Jews or Asian
refugees, have overcome significant hurdles, moving from pariahs to
paragons. A credible willingness to tackle extremism is the most
important first step to a reputational turnaround.
The fire of love in some of its different forms is described in
graphic detail in this book by Kenneth Payne. How does a God of
love come into our lives - or does he? These personal encounters,
from which the author has drawn strength and inspiration, act as an
antidote to terrible events and anxieties of the present time. This
is an encouraging book to read.
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Sermons
(Paperback)
John William Cunningham
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R535
Discovery Miles 5 350
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Sermons
(Paperback)
Frederick William Robertson
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R537
Discovery Miles 5 370
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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