Making sense of the study of spirituality: late modernity on trial |
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Authors: | Galen Watts |
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Affiliation: | 1. Cultural Studies, Queen’s University, Toronto, Canada galen.watts@queensu.cahttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-4080-253X |
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Abstract: | ABSTRACT In this article I offer a meta-theoretical mapping of spirituality studies and its many controversies. I begin by distinguishing between two projects that together constitute the field: the study for and the study of spirituality. I argue a good deal of the confusion surrounding ‘spirituality’ is the result of scholars failing to make this distinction. Next, I outline the few areas of agreement within the study of spirituality in order to illuminate what I consider the issue that defines the field: the merits and shortcomings of late modernity. By late modernity I mean the current era, whose origins can be traced roughly to the 1960s. I then offer a meta-theoretical analysis of the social-cum-political theoretical frameworks commonly used to study spirituality, delineating them according to their assessments of the contemporary epoch. I contend this is a useful and much-needed means of dispelling some of the fuzziness that characterizes the field. |
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Keywords: | Spirituality late modernity social theory Romanticism theory and method |
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