
The stories gathered in these pages lay bare the power of the arts to unsettle and rework deeply ingrained religious beliefs and practices. This book grounds its narrative in the accounts of 82 Evangelicals who underwent a sea-change of religious identity through the intervention of the arts. "There never would have been an undoing of my conservative Evangelical worldview" confides one young man, "without my encounter with the transcendent work of Mark Rothko on that rainy afternoon in London's Tate Modern." "The characters in The Brothers Karamazov began to feel like family to me," reports another individual, "and the doubts of Ivan Karamazov slowly saturated my soul." As their stories unfold, the subjects of the study describe the arts as sources of, by turns, "defamiliarization," "comfort in uncertainty," "a stand-in for faith" and a "surrogate transcendence." Drawing on memoirs, interviews, and field notes, Philip Salim Franics explores the complex interrelationship of religion and art in the modern West, and offers an important new resource for on-going debates about the role of the arts in education and social life.
This book investigates how aesthetic experiences with art and literature function as catalysts for the transformation or dissolution of conservative Evangelical religious identities. Philip S. Francis, a scholar of religion, utilizes a qualitative research framework to analyze the intersection of subjective artistic engagement and theological shifts. By synthesizing personal accounts with sociological inquiry, the author argues that art provides a space for doubt and re-evaluation that traditional religious structures often suppress.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and readers frequently note the book's contribution to the sociology of religion by providing a nuanced look at how secular culture influences faith transitions. Experts highlight this as a valuable resource for understanding the role of aesthetic experience in modern religious identity formation.
Page Count:
203
Publication Date:
2017-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190279788
ISBN-13:
9780190279783
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