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Why Study Implicit Religion? An Account of the 27th Denton Conference on Implicit Religion, 7-9 May 2004

Issue: Vol 7 No. 2 (2004)

Journal: Implicit Religion

Subject Areas: Religious Studies

DOI: 10.1558/imre.v7i2.101

Abstract:

Denton Hall in Yorkshire, UK, has been the seat of academic weekends

devoted to research on implicit religion since the late 1970’s, more or less the

lifetime of some of us younger participants in the latest conference. Judging

from the very full schedule of the weekend that took place from 7–9 May this

year, in those years study in the field has anything but exhausted itself. This

year’s conference offered a broad range of topics and disciplines, and the cases

presented promise to open up more and more interesting new domains. It would

appear that the implicit religion approach lends itself to most facets of our

society—from explicit religion to healthcare; from the business world to youth

culture. What seems to tie the different uses of the concept together is not so

much a unanimous understanding of what implicit religion is or should be.

Rather, it is a shared interest in religiosity as something not necessarily institutionalised

but nonetheless very much present in the modern world. However, if

implicit religion can be described as a ‘common cause’, then what are its goals

and what is the agenda of those studying it today?

Author: Karen Parna

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