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  1. (1 other version)‘Profane’ rather than ‘secular’: Daniel Bell as cultural sociologist and critic of modern culture.Eduardo de la Fuente - 2013 - Thesis Eleven 118 (1):105-115.
    Daniel Bell’s writings are often cast as offering a contemporary jeremiad regarding the corrosive effects of culture upon the modern economic and social order. In this paper, I take the opposite approach and argue that Bell is a sensitive cultural analyst who is claiming that human experience ought not to be deprived of culture – understood as symbol and myth that tap into the felt need for human transcendence. Bell could therefore be seen as a strong advocate for the concept (...)
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  • Religious “Avatars” and Implicit Religion: Recycling Myths and Religious Patterns within Contemporary US Popular Culture.Andrada Fatu-Tutoveanu & Corneliu Pintilescu - 2012 - Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies 11 (33):182-205.
    Contemporary cultural and media studies have been increasingly interested in redefining the relations between religion and culture (and particularly popular culture). The present study approaches a series of theories on the manner in which religious aspects emerge and are integrated in contemporary cultural manifestations, focusing on the persistence/resurrection of religious patterns into secularized cultural contents. Thus, the analysis departs from the concept of implicit religion, coined and developed by Bailey and the theories following it, as well as other associated concepts, (...)
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  • Betwixt and Between: Suicide, Sociology, and the Problem of Meaning.Scott Doidge - 2022 - The European Legacy 27 (5):435-455.
    In the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, rising rates of suicide were widely held to be indicative of a pervasive crisis of meaning. This article examines the response to the problem of...
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  • Calvinist Predestination and the Spirit of Capitalism: The Religious Argument of the Weber Thesis Reexamined.Milan Zafirovski - 2018 - Human Studies 41 (4):565-602.
    The paper reconsiders the Weber Thesis of a linkage between Calvinism and capitalism. It first restates this sociological Thesis in terms of the Calvinist doctrine of predestination as its theological core and premise in virtue of being treated as the crucial religious factor of the spirit of modern capitalism. Consequently, it proposes that the Weber Thesis’ validity and consistency depends on that doctrine, succeeding or failing as a sociological theory with the latter depending on whether or not it is unique (...)
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  • Multidimensional Approach to Religion: a way of looking at religious phenomena.Talip Küçükcan - 2005 - Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies 4 (10):60-70.
    Modern societies have by nature a corrosive effect on traditional forms of religious life and lead to decline in the scope and influence of religious institutions and in the popularity of religious beliefs. This article argues that prophecies of traditional secularization theory failed to predict the future of religion in the contemporary world. Although modernity caused a degree of rupture between religion and society, there has also been a global revival of religion in the last two or three decades. In (...)
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  • Post-Secular Sociology: Effusions of Religion in Late Modern Settings. [REVIEW]William Keenan - 2002 - European Journal of Social Theory 5 (2):279-290.
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