Discovering Religious History in the Modern Age
Stock No: WW009092
Discovering Religious History in the Modern Age  -     By: Hans G. Kippenberg, Barbara Harshav

Discovering Religious History in the Modern Age

Princeton University Press / 2002 / Paperback

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Stock No: WW009092

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Product Information

Title: Discovering Religious History in the Modern Age
By: Hans G. Kippenberg, Barbara Harshav
Format: Paperback
Number of Pages: 280
Vendor: Princeton University Press
Publication Date: 2002
Dimensions: 8.86 X 6.44 X 0.66 (inches)
Weight: 14 ounces
ISBN: 0691009090
ISBN-13: 9780691009094
Stock No: WW009092

Publisher's Description

This book makes an unparalleled attempt to analyze the rise of comparative religion as a particular response to modernization. In the mid-nineteenth century and continuing into the twentieth, Western scholars began to interpret religion's history, drawing on prehistorical evidence, recently deciphered texts, and ethnographical reports. Religions that had been rejected as irrational by Enlightenment philosophers were now studied with enthusiasm. Using comparative methods, scholars identified in their own culture traces of ancient, oriental, and tribal religions--not merely as survivals but increasingly as powerful manifestations of a human existence not subdued by rationality.

Hans Kippenberg shows how F. Max M ller, E. B. Tylor, W. Robertson Smith, J. G. Frazer, Jane Harrison, R. R. Marett, E. Durkheim, Max Weber, William James, and Rudolf Otto included in their reconstruction of the religious past a diagnosis of modern culture. Mysticism, soul, ritual, magic, pre-animism, world-rejection, and other notions were developed into a theory, disclosing in modern culture an ignored continuity of worldviews and attitudes. These scholars saw the modern world as still dependent on religion and believed that a history of religion could speak to questions about morality and identity that Enlightened thinkers or theologians could no longer answer. The study of ancient and non-Western religions, they believed, could help establish awareness of a genuine human culture threatened by an increasingly mechanized world. Their work shows how the historical concept of religion emerged and became plausible in the context of modernization, and peoples' experiences of modernization determined the meanings that religion assumed.

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