With God on Our Side
Religion, Social Movements, and Social Change
- Author(s): Anna Peterson,
- Publisher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG
- Pages: 242
- ISBN_10: 3111235386
ISBN_13: 9783111235387
- Language: en
- Categories: Social Science / Activism & Social Justice , Political Science / General , Political Science / Religion, Politics & State , Religion / Religion, Politics & State , Social Science / General , Social Science / Demography , Social Science / Sociology of Religion , Social Science / Abortion & Birth Control , Religion / General , Social Science / Sociology / General , Political Science / History & Theory , Political Science / Political Process / Political Advocacy ,
Description:... Religion plays a central role in a variety of social movements, including many that are not explicitly faith-based. This book provides the first systematic analysis of the ways religion contributes to diverse movements for social change. It draws on a variety of case studies, from the US and globally, to build an argument about religion’s distinctive capacity to provide logistical support, to inspire and legitimize activist practices, to connect different spatial scales, and to link big ideas to everyday experiences.
The book’s analysis rests on three foundational arguments. First and most fundamentally, it is impossible to understand movements for social change without analyzing the multiple ways that religion shapes their ideas, communities, and practices.
Second, religion is always in mutually transformative interaction with social and political forces and can never be entirely separated from them. In social movements and in the public sphere more generally, people interpret politics with values and concepts drawn from religion and understand their activism as spiritually meaningful. This challenges the assumption that religion is a largely a private matter.
Third, scholars must treat religion as a relatively independent variable, which actively shapes social processes just as it is shaped by them. We cannot make sense of religion’s role in social movements without acknowledging that religious institutions and traditions have, to some extent, a life of their own.
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