Crossing and Dwelling: A Theory of Religion

Thomas A. Tweed
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Crossing and Dwelling: A Theory of Religion

Thomas A. Tweed
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  • Date de publication : Mar 18, 2008
  • Langue : anglais
  • Nombre de pages : 288
  • Éditeur : WW Norton
  • ISBN : 9780674027640
  • Dimensions : 1.0" W x 1.0" L x 1.0" H
Thomas A. Tweed is W. Harold and Martha Welch Endowed Chair in American Studies at the University of Notre Dame.
Thomas Tweed’s new book is impressive in its synthetic originality, its comprehensiveness and its communicative style. It brings together many strands of contemporary theory that otherwise would not end up in the same book. It is compelling for its inventive exploration of a particular model of religion… Crossing and Dwelling constructs a remarkably thoughtful synthesis that will stimulate much discussion. It thoroughly de-essentialises religion while valiantly reinstating the pragmatic and extendable value of the category. The endnotes themselves are extraordinarily rich and extensive, with wide referencing to relevant literature outside religious studies, and the text is enhanced with twenty-four illustrations. For its combined scholarship, ingenuity and wide interest, the book will deservedly find its way onto many reading lists.—William E. Paden, Religion

An engaging, original, and insightful approach to theorizing the transnational face of twenty-first-century religion.—Steven Engler, Religious Studies Review

Tweed’s contrast of religion in stasis and in motion helps illuminate the vexing issue of religious pluralism.—Roger S. Gottlieb, Tikkun

Thomas Tweed has written the most important theoretical book of this decade, and maybe this generation, for geographers of religion… While Tweed’s theory is philosophically detailed, readers will be impressed with the wide array of religions and nationalities represented in the analysis… Any scholar interested in either religion or geography will find this volume a refreshing and enlightening study. Those interested in both religion and geography will soon find themselves woefully behind in their scholarship if they have not yet digested it.—Michael Ferber, American Religious Experience website

Thomas Tweed’s provocative, thoughtful, and meaningful insights into what it means to be religious are outlined in his new book… Tweed’s work is most welcome to those of us who understand that being human has much to do with our imagining and making places… Cultural and social geographers will find Tweed’s ideas useful in their work and in the classroom whether or not the actual subject material is related to the religious realm.—Annals of the Association of American Geographers

Beginning with his reflections on the Cuban Catholic community in Miami, Tweed develops a dynamic and relational theory of religion he feels has been lacking. He sees the key ideas of religion as being place (dwelling) and travel and exile (crossing) and uses the concept of itinerary to examine both Eastern and Western religions. As Tweed sees it, religion acts like a compass, helping to situate people in the body, the home, the homeland, and the cosmos. At the same time, we are all crossing boundaries: terrestrial, corporal, and cosmic. He offers a thoughtful analysis of the nature of religion and speaks of the limitations of his theory as well as of its potential. This well-thought-out work, accessible to scholars and lay readers alike, is a worthy successor to Mircea Eliade’s Images and Symbols: Studies in Religious Symbolism, which remains the classic text on the subject.—Augustine J. Curley, Library Journal

This is a masterpiece. It belongs on everyone’s shelf next to William James’s The Varieties of Religious Experience. Tweed’s book is at once elegant and informed, a thorough intellectual sighting of religion.—Bruce B. Lawrence, Duke University

Crossing and Dwelling provides a strikingly new and compelling theory of religion. Religions, Tweed argues, are much like watches and compasses: they help people find their bearings. Throughout he offers numerous examples from a variety of traditions and contexts to illustrate the way that his theory works. Tweed’s engaging writing style should make the book accessible to a wide range of readers.—Ann Taves, University of California, Santa Barbara

Tweed boldly offers here a new and differently devised definition of religion. And he anchors that definition in widely disparate phenomena of religious life around the globe. It is refreshing to see an analysis that moves wisely beyond the insularity of past debates. This book will stir some still waters and elicit a profitable exchange of ideas.—Daniel Pals, University of Miami

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