new religions
new religions, new religious movements (NRMs) This concept refers to two separate religious phenomena. First, there are the new religious movements of aboriginal and tribal people in the
Third World, which are the result of an interaction between local, indigenous religions and
Christianity, and to a lesser extent
Hinduism and
Buddhism. Various terms have been given to such movements:
messianic, nativistic, and revitalization movements. They are seen by anthropologists to be responses or adjustments by relatively powerless people to their social dislocation in the face of direct or indirect colonialism. The movements often borrow the radical theology of early Christianity to express a profound symbolic protest.
Second, there are new religious movements in the developed, industrial societies of the West, which are often associated with youth movements and the counter-culture. These movements are often syncretist, borrowing elements from many different religious and philosophical traditions. Sociologists have claimed that such movements satisfy the psychological and social needs of young people seeking a meaning for life which they cannot find in the mainstream religious traditions. Examples include the Divine Light Mission, Hare Krishna, the Unification Church, and Scientology.
Numerous typologies of the latter will be found in the literature. For example, in
The Elementary Forms of the New Religious Life (1984), Roy Wallis offered a threefold distinction which identified world-rejecting, world-affirming, and world-accommodating types. The first of these represent attempts to escape from the impersonality, materialism, bureaucratization, and individualism of modern life. The International Society for Krishna Consciousness, Children of God, and Unification Church (‘Moonies’) are cited as examples. By comparison, movements such as Scientology, Transcendental Meditation, and the Japanese Soka Gakkai claim to offer practitioners greater success in achieving goals already set by the status quo, including individual material advancement, psychological well-being, and social popularity: they are therefore world-affirming. Finally, innovatory religions with a world-accommodating orientation carry few implications either for individual conduct in, or for rejection of, the larger secular world, since their primary purpose is to provide stimulation for personal and spiritual experiences. Movements such as the Charismatic Renewal and Neo-Pentecostalism simply instruct adherents to live life (however it is lived) in a more enthusiastically religious manner.
Wallis's typology is, however, only one of many possible classifications of the NRMs. Some idea of the alternatives, and of the enormous literature now available on this general topic, can be gained from Thomas Robbins 's lengthy bibliographical essay on ‘Cults, Converts and Charisma’,
Current Sociology (1988
). See also
SECULARIZATION.
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
Anniversaries
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 4/5/1994; 630 words
; ...ended, 1918; the Dail Eireann chose a Sinn Fein Executive, with Eamon de Valera as president, 1919; in Japan, Kuniaki Koiso resigned as prime minister, and was succeeded by Kantaro Suzuki, 1945; Sir Winston Churchill resigned as Prime Minister...
|
|
That 'Yamashita gold'.(Opinion & Editorial)
Newspaper article from: Manila Bulletin; 3/10/2005; 700+ words
; ...of Malaya Lets see if indeed Gen. Tomoyuki Yamashita carried ten tons of gold to be deposited here. Prime Minister Kuniaki Koiso (he replaced Tojo, who lost the confidence vote) "needed someone in Manila in whom the country had faith...
|
|
Global Eye -- Logical Conclusions, THE MOSCOW TIMES
Newspaper article from: The Moscow Times (Russia); 11/6/2003; ; 700+ words
; ...Editor "The more successful we are on the ground, the more these killers will react," said Japanese Prime Minister Kuniaki Koiso, the day after 100,000 civilians were killed in a single night during the firebombing of Tokyo by American forces...
|
|
Chris Floyd's Global Eye, THE ST. PETERSBURG TIMES
Newspaper article from: The St. Petersburg Times (Russia); 11/11/2003; ; 700+ words
; ...The more successful we are on the ground, the more these killers will react," said Japanese Prime Minister Kuniaki Koiso, the day after 100,000 civilians were killed in a single night during the firebombing of Tokyo by American forces...
|
|
RememberWhen?
Newspaper article from: Birmingham Mail (England); 8/20/2009; 354 words
; ...Atlee told the relieved nation: "The last of our enemies is laid low." The Japanese administration under General Koiso Kuniaki officially signed the surrender document on September 2, 1945. The Second World War was officially over.
|
|
Three bombs explode, but only one war ends.
Newspaper article from: Huddersfield Daily Examiner (Huddersfield, England); 8/15/2009; 700+ words
; ...August 6 and Nagasaki on August 9, the day Soviet forces invaded Manchuria. The Japanese administration under General Koiso Kuniaki did not officially surrender with a signed document until September 2, and both August 15 and September 2 are known...
|
|
Eight words that spelled out victory.(News)
Newspaper article from: Huddersfield Daily Examiner (Huddersfield, England); 8/12/2005; 700+ words
; ...coincidentally the day of the state opening of the first post-war Parliament - the Japanese administration under General Koiso Kuniaki did not officially surrender with a signed document until September 2. On the day after the announcement, King George...
|
|
Kuniaki Koiso
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Kuniaki Koiso , 1880-1950, Japanese general. He was chief of staff of the Kwantung army, commander in chief in Korea, and governor-general...
|
|
Koiso Kuniaki, Lt-General
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to World War II
Koiso Kuniaki, Lt-General (1880–1950),Japanese Army officer who succeeded...Yonai Mitsumasa, a former prime minister who was striving for peace. Koiso eventually resigned in April 1945 after his unrealistic negotiations to...
|
|
Suzuki Kantarō
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to World War II
...the war as a member of the privy council until, in April 1945, following the resignation of the prime minister, Koiso Kuniaki , he formed Japan's last wartime government. A universally popular figure in Japan, who was backed by those fervently...
|
|
Axis strategy and co-operation
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to World War II
...Japan until the summer of 1944, particularly cared for each other. As for Tōjō's successors Koiso Kuniaki and Suzuki Kantarō , neither had a high opinion of the European Axis leaders, who in turn appear to have...
|