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Cynic's Progress
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17965 |
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Section : |
BOOK WORLD
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5 / 1990 |
2,579 Words |
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Buddy Matthews Buddy Matthews teaches philosophy at Collin County Community
College and is a columnist for the Richardson News. His fourth
coming book entitled Regenerate But Unreconstructed: Robert
Lewis Dabney and Conservative Thought in the Nineteenth
century South. |
THE DIVINE SUPERMARKET
Shopping for God in America
Malice Ruthven
New York: William Morrow and Company, Inc., 1989
317 pp., $18.95
Just as people fawning to observe a wide variety of unusual and exotic creatures in close geographic proximity will go to a zoo, so those wishing to observe a wide variety of religious beliefs, from the traditional to the bizarre, come to America.
America has been the greenhouse for an enormous number of religions and their variations. Some are homegrown, some are transplanted, and a few are hybrids, but almost all have found fertile ground in this country.
Thus, people interested in studying religion - historically, theologically, and sociologically - often come to America. And that is why Malise Ruthven, a resident of London and a visiting professor of religion at Dartmouth College, has journeyed across the United States and back again. Fascinated by the fact that so many Americans seem drawn to religious belief - in some cases, fanatically so - Ruthven wanted to tour America personally to discover "the source of this religiosity."
His interest in religion does not, however, mean that Ruthven professes any serious attachment to religion himself. Though raised, as he occasionally mentions, as an Anglican, he refers to himself today as an "honest-to-the-devil agnostic." That makes Ruthven as outsider twice over: He is a stranger
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