La nuova geografia socio-religiosa in Europa: linee di ricerca e problemi di metodo

Europe is a secularised society as it is seen and thought? In a recent book by Peter Berger, Grace Davie e Effie Fokas (2008) Religious America, Secular Europe? this question returns to another question, much more intriguing: is Europe an exception in respect of the rest of the world and, above all,...

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Main Author: Enzo Pace
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Rosenberg & Sellier 2011-04-01
Series:Quaderni di Sociologia
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/qds/649
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spelling doaj-9bf8e3445a2b40e0b7ebb90b272a7b282020-11-25T00:00:44ZengRosenberg & SellierQuaderni di Sociologia0033-49522421-58482011-04-0155658910.4000/qds.649La nuova geografia socio-religiosa in Europa: linee di ricerca e problemi di metodoEnzo PaceEurope is a secularised society as it is seen and thought? In a recent book by Peter Berger, Grace Davie e Effie Fokas (2008) Religious America, Secular Europe? this question returns to another question, much more intriguing: is Europe an exception in respect of the rest of the world and, above all, in respect of United States of America, following the indicators of the religiosity? (Davie, 2002; Hervieu-Léger, 2003) Or is not this assumed exception an unconditioned reflection of a chronic ethnocentrism of the European sociologists? For Berger we are watching more and more the de-secularisation and also Europe seems to be “round the corner” and to return “to faiths”. However, half of Europeans, following the more recent data of the European Values Study, affirms that they pray or meditate once a week and three fourth of them affirm to feel religious themselves. Maybe, they fail to attend mass, but they don’t renounce to think religiously and they continue to feel the need a sense of their action. At last, the socio-religious geography is rapidly changing: we can linger to make referendum for the opening of a mosque or for the construction of minarets, but the religious diversity is just evident. A well-informed social theory has to confute paradigms, schemes and conceptual matrix of the past. A sociology of religion that studies only the historically prevailing religions – lingering to debate if and what the society if secularised – risks not to understand how the society changes, its religious diversities and what they express.http://journals.openedition.org/qds/649
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Enzo Pace
spellingShingle Enzo Pace
La nuova geografia socio-religiosa in Europa: linee di ricerca e problemi di metodo
Quaderni di Sociologia
author_facet Enzo Pace
author_sort Enzo Pace
title La nuova geografia socio-religiosa in Europa: linee di ricerca e problemi di metodo
title_short La nuova geografia socio-religiosa in Europa: linee di ricerca e problemi di metodo
title_full La nuova geografia socio-religiosa in Europa: linee di ricerca e problemi di metodo
title_fullStr La nuova geografia socio-religiosa in Europa: linee di ricerca e problemi di metodo
title_full_unstemmed La nuova geografia socio-religiosa in Europa: linee di ricerca e problemi di metodo
title_sort la nuova geografia socio-religiosa in europa: linee di ricerca e problemi di metodo
publisher Rosenberg & Sellier
series Quaderni di Sociologia
issn 0033-4952
2421-5848
publishDate 2011-04-01
description Europe is a secularised society as it is seen and thought? In a recent book by Peter Berger, Grace Davie e Effie Fokas (2008) Religious America, Secular Europe? this question returns to another question, much more intriguing: is Europe an exception in respect of the rest of the world and, above all, in respect of United States of America, following the indicators of the religiosity? (Davie, 2002; Hervieu-Léger, 2003) Or is not this assumed exception an unconditioned reflection of a chronic ethnocentrism of the European sociologists? For Berger we are watching more and more the de-secularisation and also Europe seems to be “round the corner” and to return “to faiths”. However, half of Europeans, following the more recent data of the European Values Study, affirms that they pray or meditate once a week and three fourth of them affirm to feel religious themselves. Maybe, they fail to attend mass, but they don’t renounce to think religiously and they continue to feel the need a sense of their action. At last, the socio-religious geography is rapidly changing: we can linger to make referendum for the opening of a mosque or for the construction of minarets, but the religious diversity is just evident. A well-informed social theory has to confute paradigms, schemes and conceptual matrix of the past. A sociology of religion that studies only the historically prevailing religions – lingering to debate if and what the society if secularised – risks not to understand how the society changes, its religious diversities and what they express.
url http://journals.openedition.org/qds/649
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