The Robert Bellah reader
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The Robert Bellah reader
Duke University Press, 2006
- : pbk
- : cloth
Available at 21 libraries
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Note
"Bibliography of works by Robert N. Bellah": p. [523]-542
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Perhaps best known for his coauthored bestselling books Habits of the Heart and The Good Society, Robert N. Bellah is a truly visionary leader in the social study of religion. For more than four decades, he has examined the role of religion in modern and premodern societies, attempting to discern how religious meaning is formed and how it shapes ethical and political practices. The Robert Bellah Reader brings together twenty-eight of Bellah's seminal essays. While the essays span a period of more than forty years, nearly half of them were written in the past decade, many in the past few years.The Reader is organized around four central concerns. It seeks to place modernity in theoretical and historical perspective, drawing from major figures in social science, historical and contemporary, from Aristotle and Rousseau through Durkheim and Weber to Habermas and Mary Douglas. It takes the United States to be in some respects the type-case of modernity and in others the most atypical of modern societies, analyzing its common faith in individual freedom and democratic self-government, and its persistent paradoxes of inequality, exclusion, and empire. The Reader is also concerned to test the axiomatic modern assumption that rational cognition and moral evaluation, fact and value, are absolutely divided, arguing instead that they overlap and interact much more than conventional wisdom in the university today usually admits. Finally, it criticizes modernity's affirmation that faith and knowledge stand even more utterly at odds, arguing instead that their overlap and interaction, obvious in every premodern society, animate the modern world as well.
Through such critical and constructive inquiry this Reader probes many of our deepest social and cultural quandaries, quandaries that put modernity itself, with all its immense achievements, at mortal risk. Through the practical self-understanding such inquiry spurs, Bellah shows how we may share responsibility for the world we have made and seek to heal it.
Table of Contents
Preface vii
Introduction 1
I. Comparative and Theoretical 19
1. Religious Evolution 23
2. The Five Religions of Modern Italy 51
3. To Kill and Survive or to Die and Become 81
4. Stories as Arrows: The Religious Response to Modernity 107
5. Max Weber and World-Denying Love 123
6. Durkheim and Ritual 150
7 Rousseau on Society and the Individual 181
8. The History of Habit 203
II. American Religion 221
9. Civil Religion in America 225
10. Religion and the Legitimation of the American Republic 246
11. The New Religious Consciousness and the Crisis of Modernity 265
12. The Kingdom of God in America: Language of Faith, Language of Nation, Language of Empire 285
13. Citizenship, Diversity, and the Search for the Common Good 303
14. Is There a Common American Culture? 319
15. Flaws in the Protestant Code: Theological Roots of American Individualism 333
16. The New American Empire 350
17. God and King 357
III. University and Society
18. The Ethical Aims of Social Inquiry 381
19. Class Wars and Culture Wars in the University Today 402
20. Freedom, Coercion, and Authority 410
21. The True Scholar 421
22. Education for Justice and the Common Good 434
IV. Sociology and Theology 451
23. On Being Catholic and American 457
24. Religious Pluralism and Religious Truth 474
25. Texts, Sacred and Profane 490
26. Epiphany: "Blessed Are the Poor in Spirit" 504
27. Pentecost: "Beginning in the End of Times" 510
28. All Souls Day: "The Living and the Dead in Communion" 515
Bibliography of Words by Robert N. Bellah 523
Index 542
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