Articles | Volume 73, issue 4
https://doi.org/10.5194/gh-73-285-2018
https://doi.org/10.5194/gh-73-285-2018
Standard article
 | 
24 Oct 2018
Standard article |  | 24 Oct 2018

Understanding the geographies of religion and secularity: on the potentials of a broader exchange between geography and the (post-) secularity debate

Georg Glasze and Thomas M. Schmitt

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Cited articles

Asad, T.: The construction of religion as an anthropological category, in: Genealogies of Religion: Discipline and Reasons of Power in Christianity and Islam, edited by: Asad, T., The Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, London, 1993a. 
Asad, T.: Genealogies of Religion: Discipline and Reasons of Power in Christianity and Islam, The Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, London, 1993b. 
Asad, T.: Religion, Nation-State, Secularism, in: Nation and religion: Perspectives on Europe and Asia, edited by: van der Veer, P. and Lehmann, H., Princeton Univ. Press, Princeton, NJ, 178–196, 1999. 
Asad, T.: Formations of the secular: Christianity, Islam, modernity, Stanford Univ. Press, Stanford, California, 269 pp., 2003. 
Barbieri, W. A.: Sechs Facetten der Postsäkularität, in: Postsäkularismus: Zur Diskussion eines umstrittenen Normative Orders, 12, Begriffs, edited by: Lutz-Bachmann, M., Campus-Verl., Frankfurt am Main, 41–78, 2015. 
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Short summary
For a long time, the mainstream of social and cultural geography seems to have implicitly accepted that religion is becoming obsolete. However, since the 1990s, religion has aroused new interest in the social sciences in general, and to some extent also in social and cultural geography. The paper introduces the interdisciplinary debate on theories of secularisation and the promotion of post-secular perspectives and shows the potential of this debate for social and cultural geography.