2002
DOI: 10.1080/13645570110036242
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Researching religion: The vocation of the sociologist of religion

Abstract: This paper reflects on the vocation or 'calling' of the researcher in the sociology of religion in the light of his experiences of researching transformations in English Catholicism in the last quarter of the twentieth century. It takes as its starting point Weber's two essays. A consideration of religious perspectives on the lay vocation leads to an evaluation of the advantages and disadvantages of insider research. The paper reflects on research mistakes, threats and attempts to co-opt the researcher, unexpe… Show more

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Cited by 1 publication
(2 citation statements)
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“…For more than a decade scholars from a range of disciplines have reflected on the intersection of aspects of identity and their varied effects on data collection or analysis. How we 'match' or 'place' ourselves in relation to respondents is clearly significant for researchers themselves (Egharevba, 2001;Hornsby-Smith, 2002), but it is also important in considering reliability of data (Bolognani, 2005;Egharevba, 2001;Quraishi, 2008), and maintenance of credibility (Ryan et al, 2011). Following Carter's (2004) lead in arguing for an identity 'gap' as a positive methodological strategy, we have suggested here that agnosticism can create a form of 'thin rapport' (Smyth & Mitchell, 2008) to simultaneously show and protect ourselves.…”
Section: Conclusion: the Productive Nature Of Agnostic Uncertaintymentioning
confidence: 90%
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“…For more than a decade scholars from a range of disciplines have reflected on the intersection of aspects of identity and their varied effects on data collection or analysis. How we 'match' or 'place' ourselves in relation to respondents is clearly significant for researchers themselves (Egharevba, 2001;Hornsby-Smith, 2002), but it is also important in considering reliability of data (Bolognani, 2005;Egharevba, 2001;Quraishi, 2008), and maintenance of credibility (Ryan et al, 2011). Following Carter's (2004) lead in arguing for an identity 'gap' as a positive methodological strategy, we have suggested here that agnosticism can create a form of 'thin rapport' (Smyth & Mitchell, 2008) to simultaneously show and protect ourselves.…”
Section: Conclusion: the Productive Nature Of Agnostic Uncertaintymentioning
confidence: 90%
“…Other accounts emphasise the researchers' violent rejection of the local theology and condemnation of its social or psychological effects on practitioners. Some are relatively open in explaining how their religious beliefs affected the data collection process (Hornsby-Smith, 2002;Quraishi, 2008;Heelas, 2008), while a rare few describe their religious conversion during fieldwork (Jules-Rosette, 1978).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%