Sacred Markets, Sacred Canopies
Essays on Religious Markets and Religious Pluralism
Contributions by William Sims Bainbridge, Steve Bruce, Roger Finke, Anthony J. Gill University of Washington; author of Rendering Unto Caesar, Eva M. Hamberg, Ted G. Jelen University of Nevada, Las, Daniel V. A. Olson, Thorleif Pettersson, Rodney Stark, R Stephen Warner
Publication date:
09 May 2002Length of book:
224 pagesPublisher
Rowman & Littlefield PublishersDimensions:
236x156mm6x9"
ISBN-13: 9780742511866
Can individual decisions concerning whether or where to attend church, to contribute time or money to religious organizations, or to forgo certain activities be explained as a special case of economic theory?
In Sacred Markets, Sacred Canopies, Ted G. Jelen brings together the leading scholars in the sociology of religion to debate market theories of religion. As the contributors examine whether or not religious choices can be understood as responding to the same laws of supply and demand as other forms of consumer behavior, they bring out many of the issues, controversies, and concerns surrounding this innovative theory. The result is a concise source for the arguments, evidence, and criticism of the market model of religious economies—a perfect starting point for students and scholars approaching this set of problems.
In Sacred Markets, Sacred Canopies, Ted G. Jelen brings together the leading scholars in the sociology of religion to debate market theories of religion. As the contributors examine whether or not religious choices can be understood as responding to the same laws of supply and demand as other forms of consumer behavior, they bring out many of the issues, controversies, and concerns surrounding this innovative theory. The result is a concise source for the arguments, evidence, and criticism of the market model of religious economies—a perfect starting point for students and scholars approaching this set of problems.