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Introduction: Belief as Cultural Performance
Authors:Abby Day  Gordon Lynch
Institution:1. Department of Religious Studies School of European Culture &2. Languages , University of Kent Canterbury , Kent , CT2 7NF , United Kingdom a.f.day@kent.ac.uk;4. Department of Religious Studies , University of Kent , Canterbury Kent , CT2 7NZ
Abstract:Abstract

Although the concept of belief has become a focus of critical discussion in other disciplines, sociologists of religion have tended to assume that belief is a universal phenomenon, structured around cognitive propositions which can be made explicit in the context of research surveys and interviews The articles in this special issue of the Journal of Contemporary Religion explore belief in the lives of young people in different religious, cultural, and national contexts to suggest more complex ways in which belief might be conceptualised and researched. While the ‘authenticity’ of belief is a significant value for young people across these cases, the authors show how belief can, in different contexts, be a marker of identity, an expression of socially significant relationships or an organising centre for the lives of individuals and groups. Belief can also be understood as the performance of embodied practices shaped by one’s spatial and cultural environment. In this wider context, training young people in propositional forms of belief is shown to be a particular kind of religious project, which can be unstable and have unintended consequences.
Keywords:
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