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Re-conceptualising the religious habitus: Reflexivity and embodied subjectivity in global modernity
Authors:Philip A Mellor  Chris Shilling
Institution:1. School of Philosophy, Religion and History of Science, University of Leeds, Leeds, UKp.a.mellor@leeds.ac.uk;3. School of Social Policy, Sociology and Social Research, University of Kent, Canterbury, UK
Abstract:The utility of the notion of the religious habitus rests on its capacity to illuminate how embodied dispositions emergent from routinised practices come to be socially and culturally significant. This has been called into question, however, by global changes that undermine the societal stability and personal habits on which it is often understood to rely, stimulating instead reflexive engagements with change. After assessing conventional conceptions of the religious habitus vulnerable to such criticism, we utilise the writings of Latour in developing a new understanding of the term. Re-conceptualising the religious habitus as something reflexively re-made or instaured, through the cultivation of a subjectivity that locates human action, feeling and thought at the embodied intersection of worldly and other-worldly realities, we illustrate the value of this approach with reference to contemporary Pentecostalism and Islam.
Keywords:habitus  reflexivity  embodiment  Pentecostalism  Islamic piety
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