Sociology Faculty and Staff Publications

Authors

Richard L. Wood

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

11-1-1999

Abstract

Recent work by political sociologists and social movement theorists extend our understanding of how religious institutions contribute to expanding democracy, but nearly all analyze religious institutions as institutions; few focus directly on what religion qua religion might contribute. This article strives to illuminate the impact of religious culture per se, extending recent work on religion and democratic life by a small group of social movement scholars trained also in the sociology of religion. In examining religions democratic impact, an explicitly cultural analysis inspired by the new approach to political culture developed by historical sociologists and cultural analysts of democracy is used to show the power of this approach and to provide a fuller theoretical account of how cultural dynamics shape political outcomes. This article examines religious institutions as generators of religious culture, presents a theoretical model of how religious cultural elements are incorporated into social movements and so share their internal political cultures, and discusses how this in turn shapes their impact in the public realm. This model is then applied to a key site of democratic struggle: four efforts to promote social justice among low-income urban residents of the United States, including the most widespread such effort—faith-based community organizing.'

Publisher

American Sociological Association

Publication Title

Sociological Theory, Vol. 17, No. 3 (Nov. 1999), 307-332.

Volume

17

Issue

3

First Page

307

Last Page

322

Language (ISO)

English

Keywords

religious communities, community organizing

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