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Key Concepts in the Study of Religions in Contact / Knut Martin Stünkel.

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Stünkel, Knut Martin, author.
Series:
Dynamics in the History of Religions ; 15.
Religious Studies, Theology and Philosophy E-Books Online, Collection 2025.
Dynamics in the History of Religions ; 15
Religious Studies, Theology and Philosophy E-Books Online, Collection 2025
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Religion--Philosophy.
Religion.
Philosophy.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (613 pages)
Edition:
1st ed.
Place of Publication:
Leiden ; Boston : Brill, 2025.
Language Note:
English
Summary:
There is no religion lest there are two religions. Therefore, it is only possible to examine the history of religions by taking the crucial situations of contact into account. Contact needs concepts. Not only scholars but also participants in situations of contact are forced to conceptualize themselves and the other. Taking its point of departure from the contact-based approach to the study of religion, the present volume examines and reassesses a selection of concepts and models (attraction, dynamics and stability, tradition, transcendence/immanence, senses, secret, space) used to come to terms with the phenomenon of contact as the dynamizing element of the history of religions.
Contents:
Series Editor’s Foreword
Acknowledgments
Introduction
On Concepts and Contact
The Andy-Warhol-Syndrome (AWS) in Postcolonial Religious Studies
On Language
On Method
1. Attraction: Aura as Propensity. Towards a Non-Intentionalistic Description of Attraction in Religious Studies or: Why Religion Sucks
1.1. Introduction: Against the Intentionalistic Stance
1.2. Towards a Non-Intentionalistic Description of Attraction
1.3. The Process of Attraction
1.4. Conclusion: Attraction Revisited
2. Dynamics and Stability: Potentiality, Bipolarity, Metastability. Some Theoretical Perspectives on the Conceptualization of Dynamics and Stability in the Study of Religion
2.1. Introduction: Dynamics and the Dynamic Scholar
2.2. ‘Dynamics’ in the Study of Religion
2.3. Towards a General Notion of Dynamics
2.4. Aspects of Dynamics
2.5. Six Forms ( modi ) of the Dynamics-Stability Relation
2.6. Metastability: A General Notion of the Dynamics/Stability-Relationship
2.7. Conclusion: Bipolar Metastability in Contact
3. Tradition. Tradition, Recursivity, and not Identity
3.1. Tradition’s Recursivity
3.2. Tradition and Identity
3.3. Conclusion: Toward Self-Referential Tradition
4. The Transcendence/Immanence Distinction. Religion as Contrast
4.1. Introduction
4.2. Transcendence/Immanence in Comparison
4.3. The Basic Structure of the Transcendence/Immanence Distinction
4.4. Metaphors of Transcendence
4.5. The Three-Level Model of Transcendence
4.6. The Process of Transcending: Cases from Ancient China, the New World, and Medieval/Early Modern Europe
4.7. Transcending and Semiosis
4.8. TID and Contrast
4.9. Conclusion: Transcending, Contrast, and the Dynamics of Contact
5. Making Sense of the Senses. Communicativeness, Reciprocity, Immediacy, and Scriptuality in Sensory Religious Experience
5.1. On the Possible Role of the Study of the Senses in Religious Studies
5.2. Object Language Examples of Ascribing Sense to the Senses
5.3. Conclusion: The Dynamics of Sense-Making
6. Secrets: Formally Indicating Blank Spaces in Situations of Religious Contact
6.1. Secrets in the Study of Religion
6.2. Secrets and Contact
6.3. Secrets as Blank Spaces
6.4. The Blank Spaces of Secrets in Contact: Translation Processes
6.5. Conclusion: Secrets and Formal Indication of Concepts
7. Sleep: “Haec est somni et ratio naturalis et natura rationalis”. Tertullian on Sleep as a Promotor of Contact
7.1. Tertullian and the Question of Religious Contact
7.2. Contact and Language
7.3. On Sleep as an Interface of Religion
7.4. On Sleep and Contact in Tertullian’s De Anima
Prospect: Contacting the Future
Typology of Contact
Evolutional Semiosis and Relationality
Explorative Conceptualizing
Bibliography.
Notes:
Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.
Description based on print version record.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:
9789004714908
9004714901
OCLC:
1503844512
Publisher Number:
10.1163/9789004714908 DOI

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