The Cascadia bioregion – British Columbia, Washington, and Oregon – has long been at the forefront of cultural shifts occurring throughout North America, in particular regarding religious institutions, ideas, and practices. Religion at the Edge explores the rise of religious “nones,” the decline of mainstream Christian denominations, spiritual and environmental innovation, increasing religious pluralism, and the growth of smaller, more traditional faith groups in Cascadia. This volume is the first research-driven book to address religion, spirituality, and irreligion in the Pacific Northwest, past and present. Employing surveys, archival sources, interviews, and focus groups, contributors showcase a spectrum of adherents from Christian, Sikh, Buddhist, Muslim, Jewish, Baha’i, New Age, Indigenous, and irreligious communities. Religion at the Edge expands our understanding of contemporary society, pursuing empirical and theoretical debates about the nature, scale, and implications of socio-religious changes in North America, and the relevance of regionalism to that discussion.
The Cascadia bioregion – British Columbia, Washington, and Oregon – has long been at the forefront of cultural shifts occurring throughout North America, in particular regarding religious institutions, ideas, and practices. Religion at the Edge explores the rise of religious “nones,” the decline of mainstream Christian denominations, spiritual and environmental innovation, increasing religious pluralism, and the growth of smaller, more traditional faith groups in Cascadia. This volume is the first research-driven book to address religion, spirituality, and irreligion in the Pacific Northwest, past and present. Employing surveys, archival sources, interviews, and focus groups, contributors showcase a spectrum of adherents from Christian, Sikh, Buddhist, Muslim, Jewish, Baha’i, New Age, Indigenous, and irreligious communities. Religion at the Edge expands our understanding of contemporary society, pursuing empirical and theoretical debates about the nature, scale, and implications of socio-religious changes in North America, and the relevance of regionalism to that discussion.
Introduction: Religion, Spirituality, and Irreligion in The Best Place on Earth / Paul Bramadat
1 Reverential Naturalism: From the Fancy to the Sublime / Paul Bramadat
2 On Religion, Irreligion, and Settler Colonialism in the Pacific Northwest: A Snapshot from the Field / Chelsea Horton
3 Border Crossings: Indigenous Spirituality and Culture in Cascadia / Suzanne Crawford O’Brien
4 But People Tend to Go the Way Their Families Go: Irreligion across the Generations in the Pacific Northwest / Tina Block and Lynne Marks
5 Second to None: Religious Nonaffiliation in the Pacific Northwest / Sarah Wilkins-Laflamme
6 From Outlier to Advance Guard: Cascadia in Its North American Context / Mark Silk
7 Questing for Home: Place, Spirit, and Religious Community in the Pacific Northwest / Patricia O’Connell Killen
8 The Precarious Nature of Cascadia’s Protestants: New Strategies for Evangelical and Liberal Christians in the Region / James K. Wellman Jr. and Katie E. Corcoran
9 Evangelicals in the Pacific Northwest: Navigating the “None Zone” / Michael Wilkinson
10 “To Be or Not to Be” Religious: Minority Religions in a Region of Nones / Rachel D. Brown
11 Everything Old is New Again: Reverential Naturalism in Cascadian Poetry / Susanna Morrill
12 Conclusion: Religion at the Edge of the Continent / Paul Bramadat and Patricia O’Connell Killen
List of Contributors; Index
Paul Bramadat is a professor and the director of the Centre for Studies in Religion and Society at the University of Victoria, British Columbia. He is a co-editor of numerous publications, among them Urban Religious Events: Public Spirituality in Contested Spaces, with Julia Martinez-Ariño, Mar Griera, and Marian Burchardt, and Radicalization and Securitization in Canada and Beyond, with Lorne Dawson. Patricia O’Connell Killen is a professor emerita and faculty fellow at Pacific Lutheran University in Tacoma, Washington. She is a co-editor of The Future of Catholicism in America and Religion and Public Life in the Pacific Northwest: The None Zone, both with Mark Silk. Sarah Wilkins-Laflamme is an associate professor in the Department of Sociology and Legal Studies at the University of Waterloo, Ontario. She is a co-author, with Joel Thiessen, of None of the Above: Nonreligious Identity in the US and Canada.
Contributors: Tina Block, Rachel D. Brown, Katie E. Corcoran, Chelsea Horton, Lynne Marks, Susanna Morrill, Suzanne Crawford O’Brien, Mark Silk, James K. Wellman Jr., Michael Wilkinson
I deeply relate to the stories of the interviewees...By reading
this book, I feel, as a pastor, the sense of getting an inside look
at the religious mindset of our region.
*Christ & Cascadia*
I highly recommend [Religin at the Edge] as a tool for meeting
Cascadian people at their spiritual heart.
*BC Studies*
With Religion at the Edge: Nature, Spirituality, and Secularity in
the Pacific Northwest, Bramadat and his collaborators have given us
a clutch of rich essays.
*Literary Review of Canada*
Readers seeking information about secularism, the
spiritual-but-not-religious cohort, environmentalism and religion,
and the future of religion across Canada and the United States will
want to read Religion at the Edge... Highly recommend.
*Nova Religio*
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