Review: Exploring the Post-secular: the religions, the politics and the urban, edited by A. L. Molendijk, J. Beaumont, and C. Jedan. Brill, 2010. xviii + 406pp., hb. £106.00/$185.00. ISBN-13: 9789004185449

Authors

  • Mike Collins University of Gloucestershire

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/imre.v15i1.103

Keywords:

urban planning, post-secular, spirituality, religion

References

Audi, R. 2000. Religion Commitment and Secular Reason. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Baird, R. 2000. “Late Secularism.” Social Text 18: 123–136.

Beaumont, J. R. and C. Baker, eds. 2010. Post-secular Cities: Religious Space, Theory and Practice. London: Continuum.

Cavanaugh, W. T. 1999. “The City: Beyond Secular Parodies.” In Radical Orthodoxy: A New Theology, edited by J. C. Milbank, C. Pickstock, and G. Ward, 182–200. London: Routledge.

Fish, S. 1999. “Mutual Respect as a Device of Exclusion.” In Deliberative Politics: Essay on Democracy and Disagreement, edited by S. Macedo, 88–102. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Hermans, H. J. M. 2004. “Introduction: the dialogic self in a global and digital age.” Identity: An International Journal of Theory and Research 4: 297–320.

Hervieu-Léger, D. 2002. “Space and Religion: New Approaches to Religious Spatiality in Modernity.” International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 26(1): 99–105.

Rawls, J. 1996. Political Liberalism. New York: Columbia University Press.

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Published

2012-03-27

Issue

Section

Book Reviews

How to Cite

Collins, M. (2012). Review: Exploring the Post-secular: the religions, the politics and the urban, edited by A. L. Molendijk, J. Beaumont, and C. Jedan. Brill, 2010. xviii + 406pp., hb. £106.00/$185.00. ISBN-13: 9789004185449. Implicit Religion, 15(1), 103-107. https://doi.org/10.1558/imre.v15i1.103