Encountering Modernity

Encountering Modernity
Author: Keyan G. Tomaselli
Publsiher: Rozenberg Publishers
Total Pages: 203
Release: 2006
Genre: Africa
ISBN: 9789051708868

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Encountering Modernity

Encountering Modernity
Author: Albert L. Park,David K. Yoo
Publsiher: University of Hawaii Press
Total Pages: 354
Release: 2014-03-31
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9780824840174

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The story of Catholicism and Protestantism in China, Japan, and Korea has been told in great detail. The existing literature is especially rich in documenting church and missionary activities as well as how varied regions and cultures have translated Christian ideas and practices. Less evident, however, are studies that contextualize Christianity within the larger economic, political, social, and cultural developments in each of the three countries and its diasporas. The contributors to Encountering Modernity address such concerns and collectively provide insights into Christianity’s role in the development of East Asia and as it took shape among East Asians in the United States. The work brings together studies of Christianity in China, Taiwan, Korea, and Japan and its diasporas to expand the field through new angles of vision and interpretation. Its mode of analysis not only results in a deeper understanding of Christianity, but also produces more informed and nuanced histories of East Asian countries that take seriously the structures and sensibilities of religion—broadly understood and within a national and transnational context. It critically investigates how Protestant Christianity was negotiated and interpreted by individuals in Korea, China (with a brief look at Taiwan), and Japan starting in the nineteenth century as all three countries became incorporated into the global economy and the international nation-state system anchored by the West. People in East Asia from various walks of life studied and, in some cases, embraced principles of Christianity as a way to frame and make meaningful the economic, political, and social changes they experienced because of modernity. Encountering Modernity makes a significant contribution by moving beyond issues of missiology and church history to ask how Christianity represented an encounter with modernity that set into motion tremendous changes throughout East Asia and in transnational diasporic communities in the United States.

Encountering Modernity

Encountering Modernity
Author: Meei-Hwa Chern
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 386
Release: 2000
Genre: Buddhism
ISBN: IND:30000078389479

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Modernity Consumption

Modernity   Consumption
Author: Antonio L. Rappa
Publsiher: World Scientific
Total Pages: 292
Release: 2002
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 9812380094

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Offers an examination of modernity and consumption with a non-Marxist, modernity-Resistance-theoretical frame (mRf).

Encounters with Modernity

Encounters with Modernity
Author: Benjamin Ziemann
Publsiher: Berghahn Books
Total Pages: 334
Release: 2014-06-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781782383451

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During the three decades from 1945 to 1975, the Catholic Church in West Germany employed a broad range of methods from empirical social research. Statistics, opinion polling, and organizational sociology, as well as psychoanalysis and other approaches from the “psy sciences,” were debated and introduced in pastoral care. In adopting these methods for their own work, bishops, parish clergy, and pastoral sociologists tried to open the church up to modernity in a rapidly changing society. In the process, they contributed to the reform agenda of the Second Vatican Council (1962-1965). Through its analysis of the intersections between organized religion and applied social sciences, this award-winning book offers fascinating insights into the trajectory of the Catholic Church in postwar Germany.

Therav da Buddhist Encounters with Modernity

Therav  da Buddhist Encounters with Modernity
Author: Juliane Schober,Steven Collins
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 288
Release: 2017-09-14
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9781317268529

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Although recent scholarship has shown that the term ‘Theravāda’ in the familiar modern sense is a nineteenth- and twentieth-century construct, it is now used to refer to the more than 150 million people around the world who practice that form of Buddhism. Buddhist practices such as meditation, amulets, and merit making rituals have always been inseparable from the social formations that give rise to them, their authorizing discourses and the hegemonic relations they create. This book is composed of chapters written by established scholars in Buddhist studies who represent diverse disciplinary approaches from art history, religious studies, history and ethnography. It explores the historical forces, both external to and within the tradition of Theravāda Buddhism and discusses how modern forms of Buddhist practice have emerged in South and Southeast Asia, in case studies from Nepal to Sri Lanka, Burma, Cambodia and Southwest China. Specific studies contextualize general trends and draw on practices, institutions, and communities that have been identified with this civilizational tradition throughout its extensive history and across a highly diverse cultural geography. This book foreground diverse responses among Theravādins to the encroaching challenges of modern life ways, communications, and political organizations, and will be of interest to scholars of Asian Religion, Buddhism and South and Southeast Asian Studies.

Trials of Arab Modernity

Trials of Arab Modernity
Author: Tarek El-Ariss
Publsiher: Fordham Univ Press
Total Pages: 249
Release: 2013-03
Genre: Literary Collections
ISBN: 9780823251711

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Focusing on the body as a site of rupture and signification, this book shifts the paradigm for the study of modernity in the Arab context from questions of representation, translation, and cultural exchange to an engagement with a genealogy of symptoms and affects embodied in texts from the nineteenth-century onward.

German Encounters with Modernity

German Encounters with Modernity
Author: Katherine Roper
Publsiher: BRILL
Total Pages: 279
Release: 2023-08-21
Genre: History
ISBN: 9789004610378

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The novels of Imperial Berlin, a rich repository of social discourse about the simultaneous experiences of nationhood and modernity in Imperial Germany, reveal distinct historical and cultural obstacles impeding authors' attempts to envision a humane, modern German identity.