Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 442
Trim: 7⅜ x 10½
978-0-7425-1080-7 • Hardback • April 2008 • $117.00 • (£90.00)
978-0-7425-8149-4 • eBook • April 2008 • $111.00 • (£85.00)
Roger W. Stump is professor emeritus of geography and religious studies at the University at Albany, SUNY.
Chapter 1: Introduction
Chapter 2: The Spatial Dynamics of Religious Distributions
Chapter 3: The Contextuality of Religions
Chapter 4: Religious Territoriality in Secular Space
Chapter 5: The Meanings and Uses of Sacred Space
Chapter 6: Religion and Human Geography
Glossary
Useful . . . excellent and thought-provoking survey of the geographic study of religion. The book will undoubtedly inspire burgeoning cultural geographers to delve deeper into this often-neglected field.
— Journal of Cultural Geography
The book certainly has matured over a couple of years. It has been edited and proofread very carefully.
— Reinherd Henkel; Erdkunde
An intriguing, challenging, comprehensive, imaginative, and innovative text that masterfully combines the best traditions of conventional studies of the geography of religion with the insights of postmodern approaches. Clearly written, it provides some of the best explanations of the subtle differences in beliefs between religious sects and schools to be found anywhere.
— Roger Mark Selya, University of Cincinnati
A fresh, innovative, and well-written treatment of the geography of religion. It is also a welcome and significant addition to the geography of religion literature. As someone who teaches an upper-division course on the geography of religion, I have been frustrated with the lack of a comprehensive treatment of the subject. This text will fill that void and should be widely adopted by those who teach such courses.
— Timothy G. Anderson, Ohio University
Offers a broad, comparative approach that includes a wealth of case studies and examples from a wide variety of religious traditions, including the major world religions as well as a diversity of indigenous, unconventional, or extinct religions
Presents full and impartial discussions of religious doctrines, beliefs, events, and practices as they relate to key geographical ideas
Provides a comprehensive view of religion as an expression of culture, emphasizing both an outsider's view of religious phenomena and an insider's view of religious experience
Emphasizes the central importance of religious faith as a motivating force in both traditional and contemporary contexts
Considers the interactions between religion and diverse social, political, and cultural phenomena
Illustrates religious concepts and phenomena with a combination of traditional and contemporary examples
Discusses geographical and religious ideas in clear, accessible language
Organizes ideas in a straightforward, logical sequence
Includes a rich variety of maps and photographs
An essential text for courses on the geography of religion and an ideal supplement for courses in cultural geography