The Ecology of Spirituality
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Baylor University Press
Published:1st Mar '14
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

In The Ecology of Spirituality, Lucy Bregman surveys the many and varied religious, psychological, and sociological definitions of spirituality on offer. Spirituality has been made and remade many times over in the hope of fitting it to some new cultural need. Bregman argues that a better understanding of spirituality is instead rooted in specific professions and practices, and she demonstrates that it is not an irrevocably ambiguous pop cultural phenomenon, but is embodied in historic virtues and practices of a craft.
"A skeptic and scholar with a sense of humor and deep insight, Lucy Bregman takes on the mission of parsing the indefinable, making the journey personal and helpful along the way." -- Dr Terry R Bard, Rabbi, Managing Editor, JPCP Inc
"Lucy Bregman provides a stunning intellectual tour of a most important cultural development in global culture--the wild spreading of the concept of spirituality far beyond its original boundaries within "religions". The Ecololgy of Spirituality ranks in the tradition of intellectual archeology pioneered by Michel Foucault and his History of Sexuality -- Christopher Ross, Associate Professor of Psychology and Religion, Wilfrid Laurier University
"Lucy Bregman has turned her rich scholarly background, wide reading, excellent analytic skills, and down-to-earth good sense to look at the meanings and roles of 'spirituality' in contemporary culture. The word seemed to appear out of nowhere in the 1980s, and suddenly it was, and has remained, ubiquitous. Bregman looks at the nearly one hundred attempts to define spirituality, the academic environments that facilitated spirituality's emergence, and the wide array of fields and activities where the word has found a niche: psychology, healthcare, recreational sports, business. Bregman once called spirituality a useful glow word in search of a meaning. In this book she shows where the glow comes from and the meanings to which it has been attached." -- Dennis Klass, author of The Spiritual Lives of Bereaved Parents & co-author of "Dead but Not Lost: Grief Narratives in Religious Traditions"
" The Ecology of Spirituality is a brilliant critique of the shifting historical meanings of "spirituality," a protean term that today conjures everything and nothing. Bregman brings a sharp wit and special expertise in religious studies to the analysis of spirituality as a concept." -- Kelly Bulkeley, Visiting Scholar, Graduate Theological Union & author of "Dreaming in the World's Religions".
"...a stunning intellectual tour of a most important cultural development in global culture--the wild spreading of the concept of spirituality far beyond its original boundaries within 'religions'... --Christopher Ross, Associate Professor of Psychology and Religion, Wilfrid Laurier University
"A skeptic and scholar with a sense of humor and deep insight, Lucy Bregman takes on the mission of parsing the indefinable..." --Dr. Terry R. Bard, Rabbi, Managing Editor, JPCP, Inc.
"...Bregman brings a sharp wit and special expertise in religious studies to the analysis of spirituality as a concept." --Kelly Bulkeley, Visiting Scholar, Graduate Theological Union, and author of Dreaming in the World's Religions
"...Bregman once called spirituality a useful glow word in search of a meaning. In this book she shows where the glow comes from and the meanings to which it has been attached." --Dennis Klass, author of The Spiritual Lives of Bereaved Parents and co-author of Dead but Not Lost: Grief Narratives in Religious Traditions
Bregman evidences keen intellectual intuition and constructive insight in staking out a path upon which others could productively follow and expand. -- Daryl Ellis, Vanderbilt University -- Practical Matters
In this masterly overview and analysis of the roots and emergence of spirituality as a prevalent term within multiple contemporary discourses, Lucy Bregman lays out some key insights into the nature and development of spirituality within contemporary Western cultures and offers some important perspectives on what this phenomenon might be, why it has become what it is and what it might mean for society. -- John Swinton -- Religion and Theology
ISBN: 9781602589674
Dimensions: 231mm x 152mm x 14mm
Weight: 336g
198 pages