Possamai, Adam

Gramsci, Jediism, the Standardization of Popular Religion and the State

edited by Jack Barbalet, Adam Possamai, Bryan Turner
is part of

Religion and the State, edited by Jack Barbalet, Adam Possamai, Bryan Turner

, 2011 , pp. 245 - 262
Gramsci viewed popular religion as having the possibility of being a progressive movement against the bourgeois hegemony produced and reproduced in symbiosis with official religion and the state. In this pre-mass consumption society, there was the germ of a revolt in popular religion that could help the revolutionary push needed and guided by earlier Marxists. The goal of this chapter is to argue that with the entry of popular religion into the consumer societies of the Western world, popular religion has not moved further in terms of its opposition against the state. A case study of hyperreal religions and more specifically of Jediism will form the thread of the chapter. Following Simmel and Beck, I will argue that popular religion, like money, now individualizes and standardizes and by this process loses its oppositional strength.
Language eng
Names [author] Possamai, Adam
Subjects
Religione
Stato
Religion
State