Vernacular Religion, Contemporary Spirituality and Emergent Identities: Lessons from Lauri Honko
Keywords:
Honko, Lauri, 1932-2002, Finland, Spirituality, Identity, Group identity, Celts -- Religion, Material culture, Folklore, Everyday life, Belief and doubt, Great Britain, Ireland, Druids and Druidism, PaganismAbstract
This article examines lessons which can still be learned from Professor Lauri Honko’s research and writings, particularly for those working at the interstices of folklore and religious studies who appreciate the mutually enriching relationship between the two fields which has been the hallmark of modern Finnish and Nordic scholarship. Three broad areas are considered here by way of illustration: the importance of studying belief and the continuing utility of genre as a tool of research; the use of folklore and material culture in the formation of cultural and spiritual identities in the contemporary milieu; and tradition ecology in relation to Celtic spirituality.
Section
Articles
Published
2014-05-07
How to Cite
Bowman, M. (2014). Vernacular Religion, Contemporary Spirituality and Emergent Identities: Lessons from Lauri Honko. Approaching Religion, 4(1), 101–113. https://doi.org/10.30664/ar.67542
Copyright (c) 2014 Marion Bowman
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.