Atnaujinkite slapukų nuostatas

Global Perspectives on Sports and Christianity [Minkštas viršelis]

Edited by (University of the West of England, UK), Edited by (York St John University, UK), Edited by (Princeton Theological Seminary, USA)
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:

While the relationship between sport and religion is deeply rooted in history, it continues to play a profound role in shaping modern-day societies. This edited collection provides an inter-disciplinary exploration of this relationship from a global perspective, making a major contribution to the religious, social scientific and theological study of sport.

It discusses the dialectical interplay between sport and Christianity across diverse cultures, extending beyond a Western perspective to include studies from Africa, South America and Asia, as well as Europe, the UK and the US. Containing contributions from leading experts within the field, it reflects on key topics including race, gender, spirituality, morality, interfaith sport clubs, and the significance of sport in public rituals of celebration and mourning. Its chapters also examine violent sports such as boxing and mixed martial arts, as well as reflecting on the cult of sporting celebrity and the theology of disability sport.

Truly international in scope, Global Perspectives on Sports and Christianity is fascinating reading for all those interested in the study of sport, sociology and religion.

Recenzijos

"The book is a welcome contribution to the literature on sport and Christianity. The wide range of topics covered means that there is something for everyone which an interest in the general subject in the book." - Jonathan Edwards, Verite Sport

Notes on contributors x
Foreword xvi
Robert Ellis
Introduction 1(10)
Afe Adogame
Nick J. Watson
Andrew Parker
PART I Some transdisciplinary considerations
11(34)
1 Challenging the secular bias in the sociology of sport: scratching the surface of Christian approaches to sociology
13(16)
Tom Gibbons
2 Sports in the biblical narrative
29(16)
Jeremy Treat
PART II Non-Western perspectives on sport and Christianity
45(116)
3 Interreligious football: Christianity, African tradition, and the religion of football in South Africa
47(17)
David Chidester
4 Soccer fandom as catechism: practices of the sacred among young men in Argentina
64(16)
Eloisa Martin
5 Soccer victory authorized by the gods: prophecy, popular memory and the peculiarities of place
80(16)
Olutayo Charles Adesina
6 The church and FIFA World Cup in Ghana: a gender perspective
96(18)
Rose Mary Amenga-Etego
7 Religion and sport in multireligious Nigeria: the case of Kaduna City Interfaith Football Club
114(15)
Corey L. Williams
8 Spirituality and martial arts: `fitting' in the life-world
129(17)
Jonathan Tuckett
9 Playing and praying in the Premiership: public display of beliefs in English football
146(15)
Abel Ugba
PART III Western perspectives on sport and Christianity
161(118)
10 Sport, society, religion and the Church of Scotland
163(16)
Grant Jarvie
11 Protestantism and sport in the `Bible Belt' of Norway in the first half of the twentieth century
179(16)
Nils Martinius Justvik
12 Sport, celebrity and religion: Christianity, morality and the Tebow phenomenon
195(14)
Andrew Parker
Nick J. Watson
13 Church, sports, and tragedy: religion and rituals of public mourning in the Ibrox disasters of 1902 and 1971
209(16)
James C. Deming
14 Sport and Christianity in American cinema: `the beloved grew fat and kicked' (Deuteronomy 32:15)
225(18)
Sean Crosson
15 Christianity, boxing and Mixed Martial Arts: reflections on morality, vocation and well-being
243(20)
Nick J. Watson
Brian Brock
16 Hillsborough and the Church of England
263(16)
The Right Reverend Bishop James Jones Kbe
Index 279
Afe Adogame is the Maxwell M. Upson Professor of Christianity and Society at Princeton Theological Seminary, USA

Nick J. Watson is Associate Professor of Sport and Social Justice in the School of Sport at York St John University, UK

Andrew Parker is Professor of Sport and Christian Outreach and Co-director (with Nick Watson) of the Centre for Sport, Spirituality and Religion (CSSR) in the School of Sport and Exercise at the University of Gloucestershire, UK