Publication Type
Book Chapter
Version
acceptedVersion
Publication Date
9-2013
Abstract
Once ignored in national and international public policy, religion has made a comeback as policymakers have noticed the significance of the resurgence of religion, especially due to migration flows. While laudatory of these developments, this chapter specifies the need for a theological reading of the migrant religious practitioner as homo religiosus. First, we describe the social geographies of immigrant religion in an international context, drawing attention to the vibrancy of religious devotion, especially Christianity from the global south, among migrant groups. Second, we re-conceptualise religious belief through the theoretical work of John Milbank and Charles Taylor as they recuperate a theological reading of religion that is cautious in imposing secular categories on religious phenomena. Third, we perform an interpretive experiment on immigrant churches through Victor Turner’s hermeneutics of the stranger, arguing that a theological interpretation of migrant religions, including those of some social and economic means, demonstrates that they often comprise a liminal ‘church of the poor’. We contribute to the geography of religion with a call to conceptualise religious belief and practice by ways that draw out the inner logics of such phenomena instead of imposing foreign theoretical categories on them.
Keywords
Religion, migration, churches
Discipline
Human Geography | Religion
Research Areas
Humanities
Publication
Religion and place: Landscape, politics, piety
Editor
P. Hopkins, L. Kong, & E. Olson
First Page
149
Last Page
165
ISBN
9789400746848
Identifier
10.1007/978-94-007-4685-5_9
Publisher
Springer
City or Country
New York
Citation
LEY, David, & TSE, Justin Kh. (2013). Homo religiosus? Religion and immigrant subjectivities. In Religion and place: Landscape, politics, piety (pp. 149-165). New York: Springer.
Available at: https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/3132
Copyright Owner and License
Authors
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 International License.
Additional URL
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-4685-5_9