Knowing, Being, and Doing Religion

This article introduces a new analytical model for researching vernacular religion, which aims to capture and describe everyday religiosity as an interplay between knowing, being, and doing religion. It suggests three processes that tie this triad together: continuity; change; and context. The mode...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ruth Illman, Mercédesz Czimbalmos
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Finnish Society for the Study of Religion 2020-12-01
Series:Temenos
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal.fi/temenos/article/view/97275
id doaj-025aaf0b8e674a4db037a422dfb78740
record_format Article
spelling doaj-025aaf0b8e674a4db037a422dfb787402020-12-22T14:08:20ZengFinnish Society for the Study of ReligionTemenos2342-72562020-12-0156210.33356/temenos.97275Knowing, Being, and Doing ReligionRuth Illman0Mercédesz Czimbalmos1The Donner InstituteÅbo Akademi University This article introduces a new analytical model for researching vernacular religion, which aims to capture and describe everyday religiosity as an interplay between knowing, being, and doing religion. It suggests three processes that tie this triad together: continuity; change; and context. The model is envisaged as a tool for tracing vernacular religion in ethnographic data in a multidimensional yet structured framework that is sensitive to historical data and cultural context, but also to individual narratives and nuances. It highlights the relationship between self-motivated modes of religiosity and institutional structures, as well as influences from secular sources and various traditions and worldviews. The article is based on an ongoing research project focusing on everyday Judaism in Finland. The ethnographic examples illustrate how differently these dynamics play out in different life narratives, depending on varying emphases, experiences, and situations. By bringing together major themes recognized as relevant in previous research and offering an analytical tool for detecting them in ethnographic materials, the model has the potential to create new openings for comparative research, because it facilitates the interlinking of datasets across contexts and cultures. The article concludes that the model can be developed into a more generally applicable analytical tool for structuring and elucidating contemporary ethnographies, mirroring a world of rapid cultural and religious change. https://journal.fi/temenos/article/view/97275Vernacular religionJewish studiesJews in FinlandDoing religionEthnographyEveryday religion
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ruth Illman
Mercédesz Czimbalmos
spellingShingle Ruth Illman
Mercédesz Czimbalmos
Knowing, Being, and Doing Religion
Temenos
Vernacular religion
Jewish studies
Jews in Finland
Doing religion
Ethnography
Everyday religion
author_facet Ruth Illman
Mercédesz Czimbalmos
author_sort Ruth Illman
title Knowing, Being, and Doing Religion
title_short Knowing, Being, and Doing Religion
title_full Knowing, Being, and Doing Religion
title_fullStr Knowing, Being, and Doing Religion
title_full_unstemmed Knowing, Being, and Doing Religion
title_sort knowing, being, and doing religion
publisher Finnish Society for the Study of Religion
series Temenos
issn 2342-7256
publishDate 2020-12-01
description This article introduces a new analytical model for researching vernacular religion, which aims to capture and describe everyday religiosity as an interplay between knowing, being, and doing religion. It suggests three processes that tie this triad together: continuity; change; and context. The model is envisaged as a tool for tracing vernacular religion in ethnographic data in a multidimensional yet structured framework that is sensitive to historical data and cultural context, but also to individual narratives and nuances. It highlights the relationship between self-motivated modes of religiosity and institutional structures, as well as influences from secular sources and various traditions and worldviews. The article is based on an ongoing research project focusing on everyday Judaism in Finland. The ethnographic examples illustrate how differently these dynamics play out in different life narratives, depending on varying emphases, experiences, and situations. By bringing together major themes recognized as relevant in previous research and offering an analytical tool for detecting them in ethnographic materials, the model has the potential to create new openings for comparative research, because it facilitates the interlinking of datasets across contexts and cultures. The article concludes that the model can be developed into a more generally applicable analytical tool for structuring and elucidating contemporary ethnographies, mirroring a world of rapid cultural and religious change.
topic Vernacular religion
Jewish studies
Jews in Finland
Doing religion
Ethnography
Everyday religion
url https://journal.fi/temenos/article/view/97275
work_keys_str_mv AT ruthillman knowingbeinganddoingreligion
AT mercedeszczimbalmos knowingbeinganddoingreligion
_version_ 1724374126693449728