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Saving Nature: Religion as Environmentalism - Environmentalism as Religion
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Environmentalism has moved into the centre of the most influential social movements in late modernity. From preserving pre-industrial landscapes, advocating the intrinsic value of nature and protecting ecosystems against overexploitation it has developed into a worldview, ethos and practice, which radically moves frontiers in politics, economics and ethics.Saving Nature approaches environmentalism as belief system. It explores the double direction of the impact of environmentalism on faith communities and vice versa, and analyses how environmental worldviews, values, attitudes and discourses a...
Environmentalism has moved into the centre of the most influential social movements in late modernity. From preserving pre-industrial landscapes, advocating the intrinsic value of nature and protecting ecosystems against overexploitation it has developed into a worldview, ethos and practice, which radically moves frontiers in politics, economics and ethics.
Saving Nature approaches environmentalism as belief system. It explores the double direction of the impact of environmentalism on faith communities and vice versa, and analyses how environmental worldviews, values, attitudes and discourses affect religion. By drawing on sources in the sociology of religion and environmental sociology the study sheds light on the religious dimensions of environmentalism. The author locates the quick growth of environmentalism in the history of allegedly secular modernity, and interprets environmentalism in the context of modernity's re-sacralisation.
Saving Nature approaches environmentalism as belief system. It explores the double direction of the impact of environmentalism on faith communities and vice versa, and analyses how environmental worldviews, values, attitudes and discourses affect religion. By drawing on sources in the sociology of religion and environmental sociology the study sheds light on the religious dimensions of environmentalism. The author locates the quick growth of environmentalism in the history of allegedly secular modernity, and interprets environmentalism in the context of modernity's re-sacralisation.