Reviews
On the surface, the book appears more cultural studies than religious studies, but this is in fact the book's greatest strength: the essays force us not only to recognise the persuasiveness of origins narratives, but also to consider how intertwined religion is with the other social institutions.
Religious Studies Review
Series Blog
A new Culture on the Edge volume has landed! Fabricating Authenticity, co-edited by Edge members Jason W. M. Ellsworth and Andie Alexander, is now available from Equinox!
Fabricating Authenticity is the 4th volume in Working with Culture on the [...]
Source: Culture on the Edge
By Matt Sheedy
This is part-two of a two-part response to Watts and Mosurinjohn's essay “Can Critical Religion Play by Its Own Rules? Why There Must Be More Ways to Be ‘Critical' in the Study of Religion,” which recently appeared in the Journal of the American Academy of [...]
Source: Culture on the Edge
By Matt Sheedy
This is part-one of a two-part response to Watts and Mosurinjohn's essay “Can Critical Religion Play by Its Own Rules? Why There Must Be More Ways to Be ‘Critical' in the Study of Religion,” which recently appeared in the Journal of the American Academy of [...]
Source: Culture on the Edge