Concepts of religion in debates on secularization
Zielińska, Katarzyna (2013)
Zielińska, Katarzyna
The Donner Institute, Åbo Akademi
2013
Kuvaus
Katarzyna Zielińska is Lecturer at the Institute of Sociology of the Jagiellonian University. Her academic interests focus on religion in contemporary societies, gender in Central Eastern European societies and transformations of collective identity. She has participated in several research projects such as ‘Religion at the European Parliament’ (RelEP) and ‘Reconstituting Democracy in Europe’ (RECON). Currently she is a leader of the project ‘Religion in Polish Politics in the Context of the European Integration’. Her recent publications include: Collective Identity and Democracy in the Enlarging Europe (Peter Lang, 2012, co-edited with M. Góra and Z. Mach); Democracy, State and Society: European Integration in Central and Eastern Europe (Jagiellonian University Press, 2011, co-edited with M. Góra).
Tiivistelmä
Defining the concept of religion is a recurring theme in the sociology of religion. Yet the constant attempts to determine the subject of the study do not necessarily indicate the immaturity of the discipline. The ongoing discussions are rather part of a broader problem, as the acceptance or rejection of certain understandings of the core concepts determines the scope of the discipline’s field. More importantly, it also permits other concepts to be understood, along with the social reality beyond them. Since the social reality is changing under the influence of various dynamics taking place in the contemporary globalised world, so should the conceptual apparatus aiming at describing those dynamics. This paper aims to grasp this changing nature of the central concept – that of religion. This is done through analysis of the debate on secularisation theories.