At Religion Dispatches, Nicole Greenfield reviews Brett McCracken's Hipster Christianity: When Church and Cool Collide.
books
Announcements regarding books related to fields of religion and secularism can be found here.
For book forums, introductions, and reviews published on The Immanent Frame, visit the book blog.
Taylor’s Constantinianism
In the July 2010 issue of Modern Theology, Stanley Hauerwas and Romand Coles reflect on Charles Taylor's A Secular Age.
What does it mean to be cool and Christian?
Thomas Turner, author of the blog Everyday Liturgy, interviews Brett McCracken on his new book, Hipster Christianity: When Church and Cool…
Sayyid Qutb and the Origins of Radical Islamism
John Calvert, Professor of History at Creighton University and a specialist in political Islam, in hisforthcoming biography of Sayyid Qutb,…
Confronting non-violent Islamism
In the July/August issue of Foreign Affairs, Marc Lynch reviews Paul Berman's The Flight of the Intellectuals, taking the opportunity…
The Arab Gulf States: Beyond Oil and Islam
Haroon Moghul reviews Sean Foley's new book: The Arab Gulf States: Beyond Oil and Islam.
The Flight of the Intellectuals
In his recently published The Flight of the Intellectuals (Melville House Publishing, 2010), Paul Berman, writer in residence at New York…
Terry Eagleton: “Of men and monsters”
The New Statesmen has run an edited extract from Terry Eagleton's new book, On Evil (Yale University Press, 2010).
Immigration and Religion in America
At Religion in American History, Paul Harvey blogs about Immigration and Religion in America: Comparative and Historical Persectives (NYU Press,…
Orthodox by Design
Jeremy Stolow's Orthodox by Design: Judaism, Print Politics and the ArtScroll Revolution will be published next month by University of…