Realigning the Sacred and Secular among a Marginalised Population of Caravan Park Residents
Issue: Vol 25 No. 1 (2012)
Journal: Journal for the Academic Study of Religion
Subject Areas: Religious Studies Buddhist Studies Islamic Studies Biblical Studies
DOI: 10.1558/arsr.v25i1.3
Abstract:
This article addresses calls for qualitative research into the realignment of the sacred and secular among contemporary Western individuals, as well as considering the signicance of the economic and social marginality of caravan-park living on this. The 50 Victorian residents interviewed did not exhibit the enhanced spirituality experienced globally among some poor communities. Rather, the sample would seem particularly secular, albeit softened by the persistence of Christian moral codes, and a continued belief in the ineffable. The small minority engaged in active Christian worship reected the contemporary juxtaposition of postmodern deep feeling and experiences that provide compensatory release, and modern commitment to conrmatory structured ritual or life rules that give assurance. Involvement with New Age ideas appeared relatively supercial. The majority of participants displayed a commitment to individual choice and subjectivisation, and some were engaged with identity-building projects that contained a spiritual element
Author: Janice Newton