In terms of public opinion, new religious movements are considered controversial for a variety of reasons ranging from how they speak, dress, and eat, to the way they think and their sense of community. Their social organization often runs counter to popular expectations by experimenting withcommunal living (or strict individualism), alternative leadership roles (or flat network structures), unusual economic dispositions, and new political and ethical values. As a result the general public views new religions with a mixture of curiosity, amusement, and anxiety, sustained by lavish mediaemphasis on oddness and tragedy rather than familiarity and lived experience. This updated and revised second edition of Controversial New Religions offers a scholarly, dispassionate look at those groups that have generated the most attention, including some very well-known classical groups like The Family, Unification Church, Scientology, and Jim Jones' People's Temple; somerelative newcomers such as the Kabbalah Centre, the Order of the Solar Temple, Branch Davidians, Heaven's Gate, and the Falun Gong; and some interesting cases like contemporary Satanism, the Raelians, Black nationalism, and various Pagan groups. Written by established scholars as well as youngerexperts in the field, each essay combines an overview of the history and beliefs of each organization or movement with original and insightful analysis. By presenting decades of scholarly work on new religious movements in an accessible form, this book will be an invaluable resource for all thosewho seek a view of new religions that is deeper than what can be found in sensationalistic media stories.
This book looks at those groups that have generated the most attention.
Eugene V. Gallagher and W. Michael Ashcraft, pp. 169–196. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press. Cowan, Douglas E., and Jeffrey K. Hadden ... New York: Simon and Schuster. Cunningham, Scott (1988). Wicca: A Guide for the Solitary Practitioner.
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The volume addresses NRMs that have caught media attention, including movements such as Scientology, New Age, the Neopagans, the Sai Baba movement and Jihadist movements active in a post-9/11 context.
It has been said that the measure of a healthy and civilized society is how well it treats its elderly and indigent. Perhaps it should be said also that the...
This book gives readers a comprehensive map of the significant religious and spiritual groups functioning in today's world, especially in the West. It is written by specialists but with the...
Pete Earley, Prophet of Death (New York: Avon, 1993); Cynthia Stalter Sassé and Peggy Murphy Widder, The Kirtland Massacre (New York: Zebra, 1992). ... (New York: Garland, 1992), 361–93; Thomas Robbins and Susan J. Palmer, Millennium ...
We address only the social science typological use here. From a social science perspective, cults differ from both churches/denominations and sects in several important ways. Cults are “culture writ small,” the product of either ...
Robert Silverberg, introduction to Hubbard, Ole Doc Methuselah (Los Angeles: Bridge Publications, 1992), xii. 38. Pendle, Strange Angel, 253. 39. Hubbard, Fear (Los Angeles: Bridge Publications, 1991), 141–42. 40.
In this book, a group of well-known scholars of New Religious Movements offers an extensive and evenhanded overview and analysis of all of these aspects of Scientology, including the controversies to which it continues to give rise.