En savoir plus
Table des matières
1. Introduction: A Comparative Anthropology of Religious Commitment
2. Becoming Committed
3. Authentic Submission and Moral Self-Scrutiny
4. Doubt, Community, and Conviction
5. Fitting God In
6. Distraction, Habituation, and Closeness to God
7. Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
A propos de l'auteur
Daan Beekers is a Social Anthropologist and Postdoctoral Researcher at the University of Edinburgh, UK.
Résumé
Engaging with debates about lived religion, pluralism, and secularism, this book presents an ethnographic study of committed young Muslims and Christians in the predominantly secular context of the Netherlands. Daan Beekers breaks with conventional frameworks that keep these groups apart by highlighting the common ground between revivalist-minded Protestant Christians and Sunni Muslims.
Based on in-depth fieldwork, Young Muslims and Christians in a Secular Europe shows that these young adults embark on reflexive projects of cultivating personal faith that are rife with struggles, setbacks, and doubts. Beekers argues that this shared precarious condition of everyday religious pursuits is shaped by young believers’ active participation in today’s high capitalist and largely secular society where they encounter other modes of imagining and
living in the world. Yet he reveals that this close engagement with secular culture also fosters a reinvigorated religious commitment that demands constant care and nourishment.
Written in a clear and accessible style, this book reaches beyond longstanding divisions in the study of religion in Europe. It both provides rich insights into everyday religious lives and disrupts persistent binary oppositions between categories such as minorities and majorities, migrants and natives, and Islam and the West.
Préface
A comparative ethnographic study of religious commitment among European-born, Muslim and Christian young adults, highlighting how they pursue their religious aspirations within a secular setting
Texte suppl.
[A]n excellent overview of connecting discourses within the field of religion and youth research.