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Index

abortion: theory in research on, 23, 282; and social movements, 321; on moral order map, 343; and terrorism at clinics, 364, 375. See also anti-abortion movement

academic disciplines: integrity of defined in study of religion, 27–8; and multidisciplinary exchange, 28–9

activism. See social movements Acuna,˜ Rodolfo, 405–6

Adas, Michael, 374, 378

African Americans: and family influence on religious choices, 158; and feminist

theory, 288; and womanist culture, 290–91; and church involvement in politics, 208–9.

See also race African-American women, 283

agency: and motivations for religious choices, 157; and identity, 211–12; of Latinas, 401–5

Ali, Yousef, 283

Alinsky, Saul: and community organizing, 389 American Sociological Association: and

academic specialization, 4 Amish, 338

Ammerman, Nancy, 12, 69, 273, 413; on shifting composition of congregations, 226

Anderson, Benedict: on rituals of modern nationalism, 42–3

anti-abortion groups, 319. See also abortion antisemitism: and intergroup relations, 244 apartheid: opposition to by religious

organizations, 389 Appleby, Scott, 380 Armstrong, Elizabeth, 107

Asad, Talal: on ritual, 38

assimilation: of Jews, 263, 264; and moral order, 345–6

atheism: and Soviet Union, 52 Aum Shinrikyo,ˆ 375

Baha’i, 51; as organized religion, 54 Baird, Robert, 104

Baltzell, E. Digby, 305 Baptists, 128

Barrera, Mario, 405–6 Barrett, David, 107

Base Christian Communities, 388, 408 Bass, Dorothy, 144

Bataille, Georges, 364

Bauman, Zygmunt: on identity, 209, 210 Becker, Penny E., 238

Behringer, Wolfgang, 377

Bell, Catherine: on ritual, 43–4

Bellah, Robert, 4–5, 10, 185–6, 271, 398; and Sheilaism, 57; on individualism in religion, 139–40, 141; and polarization, 333; on civil religion, 354, 355

Benford, Robert D., 317

Benjamin, Walter, 376 Berger, Helen, 285

Berger, Peter, 71; contributions to sociology of religion, 66–7; rejection of secularization paradigm by, 96; and church-sect typology, 125; on religious organizations as bureaucracies, 127; and privatization of religion, 143 and identity, 210

Beyer, Peter, 10 Billiet, J., 67

471

472

Index

Bin Laden, Osama, 376

birth control: use of by Catholics, 403 Bloch, Jon, 285

Bolce, Lewis, 306

born-again Christians, 19; in typology of religious identity, 146. See also fundamentalism

Boulard, F., 67 Bourdieu, Pierre, 211 Braam, A. W., 192 Brasher, Brenda, 281 Braude, Ann, 278–9

Britain: evolution of sociology of religion in, 67–8

Brooks, Clem, 306–7 Brown, Steven, 36 Brunner, Edmund deS., 105

Buddhism, 341, 389; historic differentiation of, 47, 48, 50; as individualistic, 344; self-immolation of monks, 369

Bunch, Charlotte, 411 Burkert, Walter, 364

capital punishment: on moral order map, 343

Carter, Jimmy, 19

Carter, Steven, 355 Casanova, Jose, 70, 72, 329

Catholic Campaign for Human Development, 392–3

Catholicism, 10; and challenges to church doctrines, 6; and evolution of sociology of religion in France, 67; transnational movements within, 72; church attendance rates, 86–8, 113; anomalous vitality of in sociopolitical conflict model, 117; and family ideology and church programs, 169, 170, 171, 172, 174–5, 176; and religious identity, 6, 208

Catholics: and politics, 305, 340; use of birth control by, 403

Cavendish, James C.: on church attendance, 87

Chafetz, Janet, 283 Chang, Patricia, 11, 280

change theory: and core and periphery, 338 Chaves, Mark, 11, 280

Chicano Movement: and Latina feminism, 404

Christian Coalition, 304, 325, 327

Christian crusades: as religious colonization, 371

Christian Democracy movement, 117 Christian Democratic parties: in Europe,

310–12, 313

Christian right, 319; and politics, 59, 304; and social movements, 318, 319, 320, 325, 326; and violence, 375–6; and conservative political movements, 395

Christian Scientists, 369

Christianity: historic differentiation of, 48 Christiano, Kevin, 226

church attendance: critiques of studies of, 85, 87–90, 92–3; decline in, 90–2; impact of on health, 195. See also Protestants: church attendance rates; Catholics: church attendance rates; Jews: synagogue attendance

Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter-Day Saints, 338; violence against, 377

civil religion, 13, 221; in unregulated religious economy, 102

civil society, 348; defined, 349; as western concept, 349–53; and civil religion, 353–7; and mutual dependency of civil religion and, 357–8; and faith-based organizations, 395–6

Civil Rights Movement, 19, 318, 319, 328; church support for, 208–9, 393; and women’s movement, 323–4; influence of on Black Pentecostals, 415

Clark, Mathew, 415

class, 12, 66; as sensitizing concept, 22; in studies of religion, 24; intersection of with race and gender, 278, 288

clergy: women as, 280–1, 282

Cohen, R. D.: on impact of religion on health, 194, 199

Cohen, Steven M.: The Jew Within, 264–5 Cohn, Norman, 373, 377

Coleman, S.: on Pentecostalism, 72

Collins, Patricia Hill, 403; and black feminist thought, 288–9, 292

Collins, Randall, 32, 34; on ritual, 40 colonialism, 13, 371; and anticolonial

violence, 374–5

communalism: and moral project, 335–6, 341 community: as sensitizing concept, 22 Comte, Auguste, 17, 97; and secularization

theory, 111

Index

473

conflict: intragroup, 341–2; mainstream versus peripheral, 342–43; and new religious pluralism, 343–6. See also sociopolitical conflict model; social conflict; violence

Confucianism: historic differentiation of 48–9, 50; as culture rather than religion, 52

congregations: impact of family schema on structure and programs of, 167, 168–178; number of immigrant, 227; as different from immigrants’ home-country religious organization, 232–33; tensions in multiethnic, 233–4

Conservative Judaism. See Jewish identity: and denominations

conversion: and religious identity, 208–9, 268 Cornwall, Marie: on influence of education on

religious choices, 161 Coser, Rose Laub, 362 Crapanzano, Vincent, 44 Crawford, Sue, 280 Cubbit, Tessa, 406–7

cults: in church-sect typology, 126; and coercion, 369

culture wars: contrasted with new voluntarism, 141–2; thesis undercut by congregational rhetoric and practice, 165, 166–7; religious roots of, 306–7; and social movements, 322, 327 in civil society, 349–50. See also pluralism

Cushman, Philip, 142 Czikszentmihalyi, Mihaly, 147

Daoism: historic differentiation of, 47, 48 Dashefsky, Arnold, 12, 248

Davidman, Lynn, 12, 98, 281 Davie, Grace, 10

De Maio, Gerald, 306

De Tocqueville, Alexis, 104, 351

Deacon, Terrence: on origin of language, 32–5, 36, 38

death anxiety: decline of in older adulthood, 183

Demerath, Jay, 13, 297 demography, 11 Denny, Frederick, 228

denominations: and religious socialization, 158–60; and instability of religious identities, 218–9; impact of on voting behavior, 300, 302. See also Jewish identity: and denominations

depression: impact of religion on, 191–4, 200, 203

Diaspora: and Jewish identity, 241 D´ıaz-Stevens, Ana-Maria, 228, 283, 404 Dillon, Michele, 6, 12, 208, 269, 282, 285,

330, 340 Dissanayake, Ellen, 35 Dobbelaere, Karel, 98

Dogmatists: in typology of religious identity, 146–7

Dolan, Jay, 105 Durhan, Thomas, 280

Durkheim, Emile, 4, 5, 7, 17, 21, 96, 119, 190, 279; and Elementary Forms of the Religious Life, 18, 31; and ritual, 32, 34, 35, 40, 364; contributions to sociology of religion, 62, 64–5; and secularization theory, 111, 202; and civil society, 350, 353–4, 356

Ebaugh, Helen Rose, 8, 12 Edgell, Penny, 12

education: and Jewish identity, 247, 248, 249. See also socialization: and educational influences; parochial education

egalitarianism, 13 Eiesland, Nancy, 218, 238

Eisenstadt, S. N., 362, 370–1, 373, 375 Elazar, Daniel J., 243

Ellison, Christopher: and impact of religion on health, 195–6

Emirbayer, Mustafa: and agency, 212 Engelman, U. Z., 254

Engels, Frederick, 96, 373 Erikson, Erik, 5, 185

ethnic identity, 8, 9, 12, 22: religious institutions and reproduction of, 230–2; maintenance of through religion, 400–1; and Latina challenges to traditional roles, 401–5

Etzioni-Halevy, Eva, 359

Europe: evolution of sociology of religion in, 67–71

evangelicalism: and theory in research on, 23; as entrepreneurial, 128–9; individualistic appeal of, 140–1; and family ideology, 166, 169–71; and social activism

in Latin America, 388. See also Protestantism: growth of in Latin America

Ewick, Patricia: on creating plots, 213

474

Index

faith-based social justice organizing, 9, 13, 319, 387–8; and immigrants, 232; around the world, 388–9; in the U. S., 389–93; contributions of to democracy, 393–7; weaknesses of, 397–8; role of religion in, 398–9; in Mexican border communities, 407–11

Falun Gong: violence against, 52, 377 Falwell, Jerry, 19, 304, 328

family: as anchoring schema of congregational rhetoric and practice, 165–6, 169–178; in recent studies, 166–7; tensions between rhetoric and programs for at congregational level, 169–78

Fellowship of Reconciliation, 319, 328 feminism: current literature on, 9, 12, 276–9;

and religion and the body, 284; goddess religions, 284–5; and feminist theory, 285–6. See also women; gender; Smith, Dorothy

Fenton, John Y., 228

Fields, Karen, 94, 228

Finke, Roger, 11; on education and religious choices, 161

Finney, Charles, 128 Fishman, Sylvia Barack, 255

France: evolution of sociology of religion in, 67

Freeman, Walter, 35, 36, 38 Frehill, Lisa M., 283

Freire, Paolo, 388

Frend, W. H., 373

Freston, P.: on Pentecostalism, 72–3

Freud, Sigmund: and religious skepticism, 6 Fukuyama, Francis, 350

fundamentalism, 10; ideal type of, 73–4; in typology of religious identity, 146–7; and civil society, 352

Furstenberg, Frank, 167

Gamson, William A., 317, 404 Garcia, Alma M., 404

Garfinkel, Harold: and identity, 210

gender, 12, 292–3; and theory in research on, 22–3; and religious participation, 64; and religious socialization, 163; and Orthodox Jews, 249–51; and critiques of androcentric biases, 279; as a variable, 280; and American Jews, 281–2

Genia, Vicky, 144

George, Linda: on impact of religion on health, 191

Gerami, Shahin, 283

Gerard, Susan E., 281

Gilkes, Cheryl Townsend, 290–1 Gill, Anthony, 107

Girard, Rene,´ 364, 364–5

Glass, Jennifer: on children’s influence on parents, 156

Glazer, Nathan, 258

Glick-Schiller, Nina: and transnational religious ties, 236

Goffman, Erving: on ritual, 32, 34, 40; on identity, 210

Goldbourt, U.: and impact of religion on health, 196

Goldman, Marion S., 282 Goldstone, Jack, 362 Gordon, Milton M., 258 Gorski, Philip, 11, 14

Greeley, Andrew M., 182; on influence of education on religious choices, 161

Greenblum, Joseph, 258, 259 Greenslade, Helen, 406–7 Griffith, Marie, 281

Gurr, Ted, 363 Guth, James, 280

Habermas, Jurgen, 5, 330

Hadaway, C. Kirk: on church attendance, 86, 88, 89

Haddad, Yvonne Yazbeck, 228 halakhah, 241

Hall, David, 261 Hall, John, 9, 13, 378 Hamberg, Eva, 69

Hamm, Thomas D.: on Quakers, 340 Hammond, Philip: and spiritualism, 143; on

religious identities, 207 Hardy-Fanta, Carol, 402, 405 Hare Krishna, 51

Hart, Stephen, 395 Hartman, Harriet, 281 Hartman, Moshe, 281

health, 9, 12; impact of religion on, 190–1, 194–204. See also depression

Heaven’s Gate cult, 369 Heelas, Paul, 71

hegemony: as supported by civility, 352 Heilman, Samuel C., 263