After heroism - religion versus consumerism: preliminaries for an investigation of Protestantism and Islam under consumer culture

Using Protestantism and Islam as examples, the intricate relation between consumerism and religion is examined. Beyond the opposition of religious ‘heroic’ anti-consumerism and secular ‘romantic’ consumerism, it will be argued, there is mutual accommodation and even convergence. On the one hand cons...

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Auteur principal: Varul, Matthias Z. (Auteur)
Type de support: Numérique/imprimé Article
Langue:Anglais
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Publié: Routledge 2008
Dans: Islam and Christian-Muslim relations
Année: 2008, Volume: 19, Numéro: 2, Pages: 237-255
Sujets non-standardisés:B ethical argumentation
B Économie
B Protestanism
B Economy
B Islam
B Ethische Argumentation
B Moderne Gesellschaft
B Modern Society
B Protestantisme
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Résumé:Using Protestantism and Islam as examples, the intricate relation between consumerism and religion is examined. Beyond the opposition of religious ‘heroic’ anti-consumerism and secular ‘romantic’ consumerism, it will be argued, there is mutual accommodation and even convergence. On the one hand consumerism challenges religion by taking over some genuinely religious functions; on the other hand it exacerbates and accelerates a religious dynamics of probation and, thereby, invites religion to a specifically consumerist revival. The condition for such a revival, however, is that friend/enemy distinctions based on religion are transformed into a variant of the decidedly unheroic ‘war of shopping’. Religious commitment is assimilated to consumer preferences, and becomes reversible.
ISSN:0959-6410
Contient:In: Islam and Christian-Muslim relations
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1080/09596410801924046