ABSTRACT

Secular Societies, Spiritual Selves? is the first volume to address the gendered intersections of religion, spirituality and the secular through an ethnographic approach.

The book examines how ‘spirituality’ has emerged as a relatively ‘silent’ category with which people often signal that they are looking for a way to navigate between the categories of the religious and the secular, and considers how this is related to gendered ways of being and relating. Using a lived religion approach the contributors analyse the intersections between spirituality, religion and secularism in different geographical areas, ranging from the Netherlands, Portugal and Italy to Canada, the United States and Mexico. The chapters explore the spiritual experiences of women and their struggle for a more gender equal way of approaching the divine, as well as the experience of men and of those who challenge binary sexual identities advocating for a queer spirituality.

This volume will be of interest to anthropologists and sociologists as well as scholars in other disciplines who seek to understand the role of spirituality in creating the complex gendered dynamics of modern societies.

chapter |29 pages

Introduction

Spirituality, the third category in a gendered triangle

chapter 1|21 pages

Feminist spirituality as lived religion

How UK feminists forge religio-spiritual lives

chapter 2|17 pages

Goddess Spirituality in Italy

Secular and spiritual – two sides of the same coin?

chapter 3|22 pages

Healers, missionaries and entrepreneurs of the feminine

The secularization of contemporary women’s spirituality

chapter 5|22 pages

The (b)earth of a gendered eco-spirituality

Globally connected ethnographies between Mexico and the European Alps

chapter 6|16 pages

Re-enchanted selves

An ethnography of wild woman workshops in Belgium

chapter 7|19 pages

Gendering the spiritual marketplace

Public, private, and in-between

chapter 8|18 pages

“God wants spiritual fruits not religious nuts”

Spirituality as middle way between religion and secularism at the Marian shrine of Fátima

chapter 9|14 pages

‘A merely private activity’

Spiritual consumerism as a way to transform gendered relationships to secular and religious authorities

chapter 10|18 pages

Is yoga a girl’s thing?

A case study on working-class men doing yoga in jail

chapter 11|17 pages

“Things I do are manifestations of love”

Queer religiosities and secular spirituality among Montreal Pagans

chapter |6 pages

Afterword

To the vagina triangle and beyond!