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Titel
Christmas as religion : rethinking Santa, the secular and the sacred / Christopher Deacy
VerfasserDeacy, Christopher In der Gemeinsamen Normdatei der DNB nachschlagen In Wikipedia suchen nach Christopher Deacy
ErschienenOxford : Oxford University Press, 2016
Ausgabe
First edition
Umfangxi, 223 Seiten ; 23 cm
SchlagwörterWeihnachten In Wikipedia suchen nach Weihnachten / Religiosität In Wikipedia suchen nach Religiosität
ISBN9780198754565
ISBN0198754566
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Zusammenfassung

Christopher Deacy explores the premise that religion plays an elementary role in our understanding of the Christmas festival, but takes issue with much of the existing literature which is inclined to limit the contours and parameters of 'religion' to particular representations and manifestations of institutional forms of Christianity. 'Religion' is often tacitly identified as having an ecclesiastical frame of reference, so that if the Church is not deemed to play a central role in the practice of Christmas for many people today then it can legitimately be side-lined and relegated to the periphery of any discussion relating to what Christmas 'means'. Deacy argues that such approaches fail to take adequate stock of the manifold ways in which people's beliefs and values take shape in modern society. For example, Christmas films or radio programmes may comprise a non-specifically Christian, but nonetheless religiously rich, repository of beliefs, values, sentiments and aspirations. Therefore, this book makes the case for laying to rest the secularization thesis, with its simplistic assumption that religion in Western society is undergoing a period of escalating and irrevocable erosion, and to see instead that the secular may itself be a repository of the religious. Rather than see Christmas as comprising alternative or analogous forms of religious expression, or dependent on any causal relationship to the Christian tradition, Deacy maintains that it is religious per se, and, moreover, it is its very secularity that makes Christmas such a compelling, and even transcendent, religious holiday