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|a 9783319417721
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|a Walsh, Michelle
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|a Violent Trauma, Culture, and Power
|h Elektronische Ressource
|b An Interdisciplinary Exploration in Lived Religion
|c by Michelle Walsh
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250 |
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|a 1st ed. 2017
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260 |
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|a Cham
|b Palgrave Macmillan
|c 2017, 2017
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300 |
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|a XXVI, 332 p. 21 illus. in color
|b online resource
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|a Introduction -- 1.. Challenges and Possibilities in Interdisciplinary Encounters -- 2. Two Case Studies by a Researcher Living Between Worlds -- 3. Trauma in a Lived Religion Perspective -- 4. Attending to “Survivors as Experts”: Lessons Learned -- 5. Cross-Cultural Encounters in the Research: Lessons Learned -- 6. Poetics and Ethics of World/Sense Encounters—Cultivating the Lessons -- 7. A Queer Postlude of Intersections in the Aftermath
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653 |
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|a Religion and sociology
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653 |
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|a Psychology of Religion and Spirituality
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653 |
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|a Ethnology
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653 |
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|a Sociocultural Anthropology
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653 |
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|a Culture
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653 |
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|a Sociology of Religion
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653 |
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|a Psychology and religion
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653 |
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|a Sociology of Culture
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|a eng
|2 ISO 639-2
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|b Springer
|a Springer eBooks 2005-
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|a Palgrave Studies in Lived Religion and Societal Challenges
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|a 10.1007/978-3-319-41772-1
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|u https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-41772-1?nosfx=y
|x Verlag
|3 Volltext
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|a 306.6
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|a This book is an interdisciplinary exploration of the intertwining impact of violent trauma, culture, and power through case studies of two ministries serving in different demographic contexts within the United States. Mass shootings continue to rise in the United States, including in religious and school contexts, and the U.S. also is ground zero for the now international Black Lives Matter movement. The author shows how all forms of violent trauma impact more than individuals –devastating communal relationships and practices of religious or spiritual meaning-making in the aftermath, and assesses how these impacts differ according to lived experiences with culture and power. Looking at the two ministries, an urban grassroots lay ministry organization that serves surviving family members in the aftermath of homicide, and a denominational ministry that served a church in the aftermath of a political and religiously motivated shooting, the author develops trauma-specific interdisciplinary tools for lived religion studies
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