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Religion and the Demographic Revolution - Women and Secularisation in Canada, Ireland, UK and USA since the 1960s (Hardcover)
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Religion and the Demographic Revolution - Women and Secularisation in Canada, Ireland, UK and USA since the 1960s (Hardcover)
Series: Studies in Modern British Religious History
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A much-awaited new book by the foremost scholar of secularisation
and religion in the modern world. In the 1960s, two great social
and cultural changes of the western world began. The first was the
rapid decline of Christian religious practice and identity and the
rise of the people of 'no religion'. The second was the
transformation in women's lives that spawned a demographic
revolution in sex, family and work. Both phenomena were sudden
though not uniform in their impact. The argument of this book is
that the two were intimately connected, triggered byan historic
confluence of factors in the 1960s. Canada, Ireland, UK and USA
represent different stages of secularisation for the book's study.
The religious collapse in mainland Britain and most of Canada was
sharp and spectacular but contrasted with the more resilient
religious cultures of the United States, the Canadian Maritimes,
Ireland and Northern Ireland. Using statistical evidence from
government censuses, the book demonstrates how secularisation was
deeply linked to demographic change. Starting with the distinctive
features of the 1960s, the book quantifies secularisation's scale,
timing and character in each nation. Then, the intense links of
women's sexual revolution to religious decline are explored. From
there, women's changing patterns of marriage, coupling and birthing
are correlated with diminishing religiosity. The final exploration
is into the secularising consequences of economic change, higher
education and women's expanding work roles. This book transforms
the way in which secularisation is imagined. Religion matters more
than mere belief, practice and the churches; it shapes how
populations construct their sexual practices, families and
life-course. In nations where religion has been dissolving since
1960 into apathy and atheism, the process has been part of a
demographic revolution built on new moral codes. Connecting
religious history with the history of population, this volume
unveils how the historian and sociologist need to engage with the
demographic enormity of the decline of Christendom. CALLUM G. BROWN
is Professor of Religiousand Cultural History at the University of
Dundee.
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