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E-raamat: Secularization in the Long 1960s: Numerating Religion in Britain

(Honorary Research Fellow, School of History and Cultures, University of Birmingham)
  • Formaat: 248 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 16-Mar-2017
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780192520036
  • Formaat - EPUB+DRM
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  • Formaat: 248 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 16-Mar-2017
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780192520036

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Secularization in the Long 1960s: Numerating Religion in Britain provides a major empirical contribution to the literature of secularization. It moves beyond the now largely sterile and theoretical debates about the validity of the secularization thesis or paradigm. Combining historical and social scientific perspectives, Clive D. Field uses a wide range of quantitative sources to probe the extent and pace of religious change in Britain during the long 1960s. In most cases, data is presented for the years 1955-80, with particular attention to the methodological and other challenges posed by each source type.

Following an introductory chapter, which reviews the historiography, introduces the sources, and defines the chronological and other parameters, Field provides evidence for all major facets of religious belonging, behaving, and believing, as well as for institutional church measures. The work engages with, and largely refutes, Callum G. Brown's influential assertion that Britain experienced 'revolutionary' secularization in the 1960s, which was highly gendered in nature, and with 1963 the major tipping-point. Instead, a more nuanced picture emerges with some religious indicators in crisis, others continuing on an existing downward trajectory, and yet others remaining stable. Building on previous research by the author and other scholars, and rejecting recent proponents of counter-secularization, the long 1960s are ultimately located within the context of a longstanding gradualist, and still ongoing, process of secularization in Britain.

Arvustused

Field has probably set, at least for the foreseeable future, the numeric parameters within which historians will need to work, and that is an outstanding achievement. * Jeremy Morris, Anglican and Episcopal History * Through an exploration of church statistics, public opinion surveys, and other quantitative data, he attempts to construct the most comprehensive picture yet of the statistical evidence for religious change between the early 1960s and the late 1970s...That all this data is marshalled for the first time within a single, comprehensive and meticulously footnoted volume is reason enough to recommend this as a must-read book for anyone researching religious change in post-war Britain. However, it does more. ...the book also works well as an account of the changing ways in which individuals and organizations in the long 1960s thought about religion and tried to count it. Even as a specialist on this period I learned a great deal. * Ian Jones, Reading Religion *

List of Tables
xi
List of Abbreviations
xv
Categorization of Social Grades xvii
1 Introduction
1(22)
Historiography
1(7)
Sources
8(11)
Parameters
19(4)
2 Belonging---Aggregate Measures
23(27)
Religious Profession
23(10)
Self-Assessed Religiosity
33(4)
Religious Membership
37(5)
Sunday School Enrolments
42(4)
Religious Community
46(4)
3 Belonging---Denominations and Faiths
50(31)
Anglican Churches
50(5)
Roman Catholic Church
55(9)
Orthodox Churches
64(1)
Other Churches
64(12)
Non-Christian Faiths
76(3)
Organized Irreligion
79(2)
4 Behaving---Churchgoing
81(24)
Introduction
81(1)
National Church Data
82(8)
Local Church Counts
90(5)
National Sample Surveys
95(7)
Local Sample Surveys
102(3)
5 Behaving---Other Practices
105(24)
Rites of Passage
105(10)
Religious Broadcasting
115(7)
Other Religious Practices
122(7)
6 Believing---Beliefs and Experience
129(23)
Measuring Religious Beliefs
129(4)
Belief in Life Forces
133(4)
Belief in Life after Death
137(4)
Alternative Beliefs
141(6)
Religious Experience
147(5)
7 Believing---Attitudes
152(31)
Influence of Religion and the Churches
152(3)
Religious Prejudice
155(5)
Sunday Observance
160(6)
Religion and Morality
166(8)
Religion and Politics
174(9)
8 Institutional Measures
183(23)
Places of Worship
183(8)
Religious Personnel
191(9)
Religious Finance
200(6)
9 Conclusion
206(25)
Belonging
206(4)
Behaving
210(3)
Believing
213(4)
Institutional Measures
217(1)
Final Reckoning
218(5)
Secularization Redivivus
223(8)
Select Bibliography 231(28)
Index 259
Clive D. Field is Honorary Research Fellow in the School of History and Cultures at the University of Birmingham and a former Director of Scholarship and Collections at The British Library. He has researched and published extensively on the social history of religion in Britain from 1689 to the present with special reference to religious statistics and the history of Methodism. His previous works include Britain's Last Religious Revival? Quantifying Belonging, Behaving, and Believing in the Long 1950s (2015). He is co-director of British Religion in Numbers, a British Academy Research Project.