How does religious faith contribute to happiness? The usual answer is
that religious belief relieves the anxieties of ordinary life and that
religious belonging provides emotional support. But a growing body of
literature suggests that happiness is more complicated than that.
Happiness is not only a feeling. It is a practice that we engage in
actively, that we attempt to manage, and that is in many ways managed
for us -- by social norms and institutions. In Nurturing Happiness,
Robert Wuthnow develops the concept of emotional practice and locates
it in the sociological literature on practice theory. He describes how
American faith leaders at pivotal moments in their history attempted
to nurture -- and control -- their adherents' thoughts about happiness
and their experiences of it. He shows how religious authorities used
their discursive power to draw moral distinctions among kinds of
happiness and their institutional power to manage where it took place
and how it was expressed. And he demonstrates that religious
authorities' efforts to nurture happiness, while not always effective,
played a crucial role in faith communities' adaptation to changing
social conditions. This book describes these adaptations in
colonial-era arguments about heavenly joy and virtuous living,
nineteenth-century revival meetings and festive events,
Progressive-era advocacy for useful service, recent efforts to link
play with transcendence and to associate joyful spirituality with
personal discipline, and current responses to the fallout from illicit
pursuits of happiness. Nurturing Happiness is required reading for
anyone interested in understanding how religious faith relates to
happiness.
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How Religion Shapes Emotional Practice
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780197807057
Publisert
2025
Utgiver
Oxford University Press Academic US
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter