ABSTRACT

Peter Beyer, a distinguished sociologist of religion, presents a way of understanding religion in a contemporary global society - by analyzing it as a dimension of the historical process of globalization. Introducing theories of globalization and showing how they can be applied to world religions, Beyer reveals the nature of the contested category of ‘religion’: what it means, what it includes and what it implies in the world today.

Written with exceptional clarity and illustrated with lively and diverse examples ranging from Islam and Hinduism to African traditional religions and new age spirituality, this is a fascinating overview of how religion has developed in a globalized society. It is recommended reading for students taking courses on sociology of religion, religion and globalization, and religion and modernity.

chapter |17 pages

Introduction

Religion as concept and social reality in global society

chapter |71 pages

Formation and re-formation of Abrahamic religions

Christianity and Islam

chapter |37 pages

The realization of Hinduism

chapter |29 pages

Refusal and appropriation in East Asia

Confucianism and Shinto

chapter |3 pages

Conclusion