L A K E H E A D U N I V E R S I T Y



L A K E H E A D U N I V E R S I T Y

DEPARTMENT OF SOCIOLOGY

Sociology 3503 YA

Religion and Spirituality

Instructor: Dr. David A. Nock 2006-2007

Office: RB 2036 Monday: 11:30-1:00 p.m.

Telephone: 343-8531 Wednesday: 11:30-1:00 p.m.

RB 3026

Office Hours

Tuesday: 2:00-4:30 p.m.

Two major themes will provide a focus for this course: modernity (and modernization) and secularization. How have religious groups dealt with a very fast-changing, technological and scientific age when most religions originally developed in a pre-modern world? Are the traditional religious groups fated to disappear and if so what will they be replaced by, if anything? The first term will concentrate on sociological understanding of important religious themes and groups in western society; the second term will continue some of these topics in greater depth – especially the future of religion and forms of spirituality. The issue will be raised how religious involvement impacts the daily lives of individuals and of society more generally.

COURSE OUTLINE

1. Introduction: course outline

2. Definitions of religion and spirituality

[Hunt, Chapter 1; Bowen: 19-20; 38-40; 84-87; 234-241.]

3. Religious Demography of Canadians; The Organization of Religious Life in Canada

[Bowen, Chapter 2; Nock, Cancopy Reading

4. Secularization and the 'Decline' of Religion

[Hunt, Chapter 2; Bowen, Chapter 1]

5. The Resurgence of Religion?

[Hunt, Chapter 3]

6. Western Religion in the Global Contest

[Hunt, Chapter 4]

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Sociology 3503 YA 2 Dr. David A. Nock

COURSE OUTLINE 2006/2007

7. Religion: Change and Stability in Western Societies

[Hunt, Chapter 5]

8. Belief, Practice and Belonging

[Hunt, Chapter 6]

9. Challenges to Western Christianity

[Hunt, Chapter 7]

10. Sectarianism and Fundamentalism

[Hunt, Chapter 8]

11. Cults and New Religiosity

[Hunt, Chapter 9]

12. The New Religion – Issues and Controversies

[Hunt, Chapter 10]

13. The Religions of Ethnic Minorities in the West

[Hunt, Chapter 11]

14. Popular Forms of Religiosity

[Hunt, Chapter 12]

15. The Religious Individual: Well-Being and Personal Values

[Bowen, Chapter 3]

16. Intimate Relations: Sex, Marriage, Family, and Friends

[Bowen, Chapter 4]

17. Civic Sensibilities: Volunteering and Charitable Giving

[Bowen, Chapter 5]

18. Public Life and Social Values

[Bowen, Chapter 6]

19. Christians and Their Churches: Beliefs, Attachments, and Controversies

[Bowen, Chapter 7]

20. Conclusion: The Future of Religion in the West and Elsewhere

[Hunt, 209-215; Bowen 272-288; Bibby: Cancopy Reading]

This outline will generally be followed. However the order in which they are presented depends on final decisions by the instructor. Students should ensure they follow and adjust to these "finetunings" having to do with the sequence of material.

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Sociology 3503 YA 3 Dr. David A. Nock

COURSE OUTLINE 2006/2007

Required Textbooks (Available at Bookstore or online)

These textbooks should be bought by everyone. The instructor does not lend his own copies. Active reading requires that each student should obtain his/her own personal copy whenever possible. There is often a rush for the copy that is available in the library.

1. Stephen J. Hunt. Religion in Western Society.

2. Kurt Bowen. Christians in a Secular World: The Canadian Experience.

3. Cancopy Readings: David A. Nock, The Organization of Religious Life in Canada.

Reginald Bibby, Secularization and Change.

Roger O'Toole et al., The United Church in Crisis.

4. shekinah-jwh.ca – Articles by David Nock under "Guest Authors"

a) Religion and Popular Culture

b) Why Religion is Good for You and Society

5. canberra.edu.au/studyskills/learning/

Recommended Material (textbooks)

a) Hewitt, W.E. (ed.), The Sociology of Religion: A Canadian Focus. 1993.

b) Bibby, Reginald W., Unknown Gods: The Ongoing Story of Religion in Canada. 1993.

c) Dawson, Lorne L., Comprehending Cults: The Sociology of New Religious Movements, 1998.

d) Meredith McGuire, Religion: The Social Context.

e) J. Milton Yinger, The Scientific Study of Religion.

f) D.A. Nock, Chapter on "Religion." This is a chapter from K. Ishwaran, ed., Sociology: An

Introduction. 1986. It is a clear precis to the course material and should be read for the two

examinations.

g) Elizabeth Nottingham, Religion: A Sociological View.

h) Swatos, William H. Jr. editor. Encyclopedia of Religion and Society. 1998. On Reserve

i) Susan Budd, Sociologists and Religion.

j) John Wilson, Religion in American Society: The Effective Presence.

k) Keith Roberts, Religion in Sociological Perspective.

l) Julia M. Corbett, Religion in America, 1990. . . . / 4

Sociology 3503 YA 4 Dr. David A. Nock

COURSE OUTLINE 2006/2007

m) Bryan Wilson, Religious Sects.

n) R. Stark and W.S. Bainbridge, The Future of Religion: Secularization, Revival and Cult Formation. Berkeley, University of California Press, 1985. On Reserve

o) R. Stark, The Rise of Christianity, 1996.

p) G.A. Rawlyk, Is Jesus Your Personal Saviour? In Search of Canadian Evangelicalism in the 1990s. 1996.

q) Michael Hill, A Sociology of Religion.

r) Paul Bramadat and David Seljak, eds. Religion and Ethnicity in Canada. 2005.

s) Steve Bruce, God is Dead: Secularization in the West. 2002.

t) Richard K. Fenn, ed. The Blackwell Companion to Sociology of Religion. 2001.

u) canberra.edu.au/studyskills/learning/

Further Readings

Ammerman, Nancy Tatom, Baptist Battles. 1990.

Barber, Eileen, et al. eds. Secularization, Rationalism, and Sectarianism: Essays in Honor of Bryan R. Wilson. 1993.

Barker, Eileen, The Making of a Moonie. 1984.

Baum, Gregory, Religion and Alienation: A Theological Reading of Sociology. 1975.

Beckford, James. The Triumph of Prophecy: A Sociological Study of Jehovah's Witnesses. 1975.

____________, Cult Controversies. 1985.

Berger, Peter, L. "Some Second Thoughts on Substantive versus Functional Definitions of Religion." Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion. 1974, pp. 126-133.

. “The Desecularization of the World. 1999.

Bibby, Reginald W., Chapter on "Religion" in Robert Hagedorn, ed., Sociology, pp. 387-427. 1980.

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Sociology 3503 YA 5 Dr. David A. Nock

COURSE OUTLINE 2006/2007

. Fragmented Gods. 1987.

. in “Cancopy Readings”. 1993.

Brandon, Ruth, The Spiritualists. 1983.

Bromley, D.G. and A.D. Shupe, Strange Gods. 1981.

Bruce, Steve, ed. Religion and Modernization: Sociologists and Historians Debate the Secularization Thesis. 1992.

Bruce, Steve, Religion in Modern Britain. 1995.

. Religion in the Modern World: From Cathedrals to Cults. 1996.

. Fundamentalism. 2001.

Brym, Robert J. et al. (eds.) The Jews in Canada. 1992.

Budd, Susan. Varieties of Unbelief. 1977.

Burns, Gene. The Frontiers of Catholicism: The Politics of Ideology in a Liberal World.

Campbell, Colin. Toward a Sociology of Unbelief. 1972.

Caplow, T. et al. All Faithful People: Change and Continuity in Middletown's Religion. 1983.

Clark, S.D., Church and Sect in Canada. A classic work in the field. It deals with the period 1760 to 1900 and is thus historical in focus. Heavy going but worth the attention.

Corbett, Julia M. Religion in America. 1990.

Crysdale, S., The Changing Church in Canada: National Survey of the Church in Canadian Society, 1965.

Crysdale, S. and L. Wheatcroft, eds., Religion in Canadian Society. Toronto. 1976.

Davies, Alan. Antisemitism in Canada. 1992.

Davies, G. Religion in Britain Since 1945: Believing Not Belonging. 1994.

Dawson, Lorne, L. Cults in Context: Readings in the Study of New Religious Movements. 1996.

Ellwood, Robert S. and H.B. Partin, Religious and Spiritual Groups in Modern America. 1988.

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Sociology 3503 YA 6 Dr. David A. Nock

COURSE OUTLINE 2006/2007

Essien-Udom, E.U., Black Nationalism: A Search For Identity in America 1962(7).

Finke, Roger and R. Stark: The Churching of America: Winners and Losers in Our Religious Economy. 1992.

Gibson, David. The Coming Catholic Church. 2003.

Glock, Charles G. and Rodney Stark, Religion and Society in Tension. 1965.

Gould, Stephen Jay. Wonderful Life. 1989.

Graham, Ron. God’s Dominion. 1990.

Greeley, Andrew M., Religious Change in America. 1989.

____ . Unsecular Man: The Persistence of Religion. 1972.

Hamilton, M. Sociology and the world’s religions. 1998.

Hamm, Peter M., Continuity and Change Among Canadian Mennonite Brethren. 1987.

Hammond, Philip. Religion and Personal Autonomy: The Third Disestablishment in America.

Heelas, P. The New Age Movement. 1996.

Hoge, Dean R. et al. Vanishing Boundaries: The Religion of Mainline Protestant Baby Boomers. 1994.

Hunter, James Davidson. Culture Wars: The Struggle to Define America.

. American Evangelicalism: Conservative Religion and the Quandary of Modernity. 1983.

James, William. The Varieties of Religious Experience. 1902.

Jenkins, Philip. Mystics and Messiahs: Cults and New Religions in American History. 1999.

. Spirit Chasers.

Johnson, Frederick B. Religion, Modernity and Homosexual Ordination in a Liberal Protestant Ordination. M.A. Thesis, Lakehead University. 1993.

Kelley, Dean. Why Conservative Churches Are Growing. 1972.

Kephart, William M. & W. W. Zellner. Extraordinary Groups. 1994.

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Sociology 3503 YA 7 Dr. David A. Nock

COURSE OUTLINE 2006/2007

Kosmin, B.M. and S.P. Lachman. One Nation Under God: Religion in Contemporary American Society. 1993.

Kurtz, L. Gods in the global village. 1995.

Levitt, C. & W. Schaffir. The riot at Christie Pits. 1987.

Lyon, David. Jesus in Disneyland: Religion in Postmodern Times. 2000.

Mann, W.E., Sect, Cult and Church in Alberta. 1955.

Martin, David, "The Denomination," Bt. Journal of Sociology. 1962.

. “The secularization issue” British Journal of Sociology, pp.465-74. 1991.

Marshall, Donald B. Secularizing the Faith: Canadian Protestant Clergy and the Crisis of Belief, 1850-1940. 1992.

Mauss, Armand. The Angel and the Beehive: The Morman Struggle with Assimilation. 1994.

Mol, Hans, Faith and Fragility: Religion and Identity in Canada. 1986.

McAuley, E. Nancy, Faith without Form: Beliefs of Catholic Youth. 1986.

McSweeney, Bill, Roman Catholicism: the Search for Relevance. Oxford Basil Blackwell. 1980.

Nelson, Geoffrey K., Spiritualism and Society. 1969.

Nesbitt, Paula D. Feminization of the Clergy in America. 1997

Nevaskar, B. Capitalists without Capitalism: The Jains of India and the Quakers of the West. 1971.

Niebuhr, H. Richard, The Social Sources of Denominationalism. 1929.

Nock, David A., "Differential Ecological Receptivity of Conversionist and Revolutionist Sects," Sociological Analysis, 229-246. 1989.

. In Cancopy Readings. 1993.

. "The Historical Process and the Reformulation of Religious Typologies: The Case of the Anglican Communion," The Sociological Review, Vol. 29, No. 4, 521-541. 1981.

. . . / 8

Sociology 3503 YA 8 Dr. David A. Nock

COURSE OUTLINE 2006/2007

O'Toole, Roger, Religion: Classic Sociological Approaches. 1984.

Penton, M. James, Apocalypse Delayed: The Story of Jehovah's Witnesses. 1985.

_____, Jehovah's Witnesses in Canada: Champions of Freedom of Speech and Worship. 1976.

Peshkin, Alan. Gods Choice: The Total World of a Fundamentalist Christian School.

Peter, Karl A., The Dynamics of Hutterite Society. 1987.

Poll, S., The Hasidic Community of Williamsburg. 1962(69).

Pope, L., Millhands and Preachers. Set in Dukes of Hazzard country. 1942 (1st ed.)

Reeves, Thomas C. The empty church: Does Organized Religion Matter Anymore? 1996.

Reimer, Sam. Evangelicals and the Continental Divide. 2003.

Riordon, Michael. The First Stone: Homosexuality and the United Church. 1990.

Roof, Wade Clark. A Generation of Seekers: The Spiritual Journeys of the Baby Boom Generation. 1993.

. Spiritual Marketplace: Baby Boomers and the Remaking of American Religion. 1999.

Roof, Wade C. and Wm. McKinney, American Mainline Religion. 1987.

Rose, Susan D. Keeping Them Out of the Hands of Satan: Evangelical Schooling in America. 1988.

Scheffel, David, In the Shadow of Antichrist: The Old Believers of Alberta. 1991.

Schwartz, Gary, Sect Ideologies and Social Status.

Seidler, J. and K. Meyer. Conflict and Change in the Catholic Church. 1989.

Shaffir, W., Life in a Religious Community: The Lubavitcher Chassidim in Montreal, 1974.

Shermer, Michael. How We Believe: The Search for God in an Age of Science. 1999.

Smucker, Donovan E., A Sociology of Canadian Mennonites, Hutterites and Amish: A Bibliography with Annotations. Invaluable for any research on these groups.

Sorokin, P.A. The Crisis of Our Age. 1941.

. . . / 9

Sociology 3503 YA 9 Dr. David A. Nock

COURSE OUTLINE 2006/2007

Special issues of the Canadian Journal of Sociology, Vol. 3, No. 2, 1978. Articles on Mainstream Protestantism, Judaism, Mormonism, Mennonites, etc. in Canada.

Stackhouse, John G. Canadian evangelicalism in the twentieth century. 1993.

Stark, Rodney, Sociology. Chapter on Religion, 350-375.

Stark, Rodney and Roger Finke. Acts of Faith. 2000.

Stourton, Edward. Absolute Truth: The Catholic Church in the World Today. 1998.

Thomas, Keith. Religion and the Decline of Magic. 1971.

Thrower, James. Religion and the Classical Theories. 1999.

Towler, Robert, The Fate of the Anglican Clergy. 1979.

Victor, Jeffrey S. Satanic Panic: The Creation of a Contemporary Legend.

Wagner, Melinda Bollar. God's Schools: Choice and Compromise in American Society.

Wallace, Ruth A. They Call Her Pastor: A New Role for Catholic Women. 1992.

Wallis, R., The Road to Total Freedom: A Sociological Analysis of Scientology. 1976.

Ware, K. (or T.). The Orthodox Church. 1964.

Washington. Madame Blavatsky's Baboon: Theosophy and the Emergence of the Western Guru. 1993.

Waugh, E. et al. eds. Muslim Families in North America. 1991.

Wilson, A.N. God's Funeral. 1999.

Wilson, Bryan, Religious Sects (would have been selected as a text but is out of print!); BR 157 W75R. [On Reserve]

_____ . Religion in Secular Society: A Sociological Comment. 1966.

_____ . Sects and Society: A Sociological Study of Three Religious Groups in Britain.

_____ . Religion in Sociological Perspective. 1982.

_____ . The Social Dimensions of Sectarianism. 1990

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Sociology 3503 YA 10 Dr. David A. Nock

COURSE OUTLINE 2006/2007

Wilson, Bryan and K. Dobbelaere. A Time to Chant. 1994.

Wuthnow, Robert, After Heaven: Spirituality in America since the 1950s. 1998

. The Struggle for America's Soul: Evangelicals, Liberals and Secularism. 1989.

. The Restructuring of American Religion. 1988.

Websites

.com

bsu.edu./web/jcorbett/relig/



shekinah-jwh.ca

Evaluation

A. Study Skills Assignment.. ............................……….10% October 4, 2006

B. First Clipping Assignment……………….…………15% November 20, 2006

C. In-Class Test of First Term Work..............................15% January 17, 2007

D. Second Clipping Assignment…..………………...... 15% March 7, 2007

E. Classroom Presentation..............................................15% TBA—normally 2nd term

F. Final Examination……………...………………...... 30% April 10-21, 2007

Clipping Assignments 15% x 2 = 30%

The clipping assignment consists of selecting newspaper-magazine articles of no more than a xeroxed page each and a four to six page summary analysis each showing how the article reflects themes in the course and textbooks.

The write-up for each selected article should summarize clearly the article, stressing the main points in the student's own words. You should avoid rephrasing the article in its own style. The style of the summary should clearly be yours. Then you should clearly relate the content of the clipping to the themes of the course as presented in the textbooks or class lectures. Please be specific and point out when or where by page number or date. The aim of the clipping assignment is to show how the textbooks are related to what is going on in the world today.

Clippings selected should reflect a "news" focus or in some cases might reflect distinctive aspects of a group (for example what "speaking in tongues" consists of to Pentecostals). "Humdrum" articles about the election of a new executive would not normally qualify.

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Sociology 3503 YA 11 Dr. David A. Nock

COURSE OUTLINE 2006/2007

You must clearly provide the date for each article and provide the name of the publication. You must show awareness of what kind of publication you have chosen. Just "grabbing something" off the internet about which you have no further information, does not qualify as satisfactory. Generally speaking, middle-of-the-road publications such as reputable newspapers and newsmagazines should be chosen. Articles from specifically affiliated religious publications may be chosen only if they are balanced in tone, or are specifically chosen by you to present a point-of-view.

Study Skills Assignment – 10%

Students must précis in your own words and with your own personal emphasis the material on the study skills website listed under Required and Recommended Reading. Then you must list three tips which you feel will be most relevant to improving your own study skills [5 pages, double spaced, typed – not handwritten]. See canberra.edu/au/studyskills/learning/

Classroom Presentation - 15%

You will be asked to present one of the clippings you select from your Written Newspaper Clipping assignments in class orally. Your total of clippings selected remains two in total. You will submit both clippings in written form but one of them you also present orally. The one difference between the written and oral presentation is that in the latter you should raise a question for the class to respond to. You must consult with the professor about the clipping you wish to present as it must be relevant to the class content. It is a good idea to have more than one clipping ready to present in case someone else gets to your clipping first (this rarely happens but occasionally it does). Generally speaking the assignment goes well. Most people are a little nervous–that is natural but this assignment is good training for the white-collar jobs you will have in the future.

Educational Philosophy

In most universities, "lectures" by the professor are balanced by a tutorial section which involves students more directly. In this class, lectures by the professor will be balanced by relevant a.v. material and by a classroom presentation by students. Each of these methods of instruction is important. Students should take each seriously and actively, e.g. by taking notes during videos and student presentations. Questions on exams may refer to each of these sources of information, for example. Attendance is very important as students are expected to have been present for all facets of learning.

Aims of the Course

1. To allow students to learn the distinctively sociological approach to the study of religion. Students should normally have taken Sociology 1100 or other Sociology courses. Those who have not should make special efforts to ensure they are comfortable with the sociological perspective.

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Sociology 3503 YA 12 Dr. David A. Nock

COURSE OUTLINE 2006/2007

2. To allow students to be able to make meaningful distinctions in the social factors which distinguish religious groups, to increase understanding of religious traditions in Canada and their growth and decline, and to understand the extent and nature of secularization.

3. To allow students to have a better understanding of the multicultural and pluralistic society which present-day Canada exhibits.

4. To encourage students in white collar skills such as writing of reports and making presentations which may be useful in gaining employment.

Caveats, Cautions and Encouragements

1. In this course, no negative connotations are to be attributed to such terms as cult, sect, denomination and church. Neither is any of these terms deemed to be of greater or lesser divine ordinance.

2. The aim of the sociology of religion is neither to prove nor to disprove any religious beliefs. Stark and Bainbridge should be kept in mind, "It is not our intent to suggest anything about the truth of religion. We seek only to discover its visible aspects--the social forms it takes in the world we all can see" (p. 14). See also the following statement:

Definition "The sociology of religion may be defined as the scientific study of religion as a social institution, including its interrelationships with other social institutions and other aspects of society and culture" (Earl D. Brewer). Emotional commitments and personal sentiments must be subordinated to this scientific perspective.

3. Students are encouraged to speak up and make comments or to ask questions as this makes learning easier and encourages a view of knowledge as one of exchange rather than passive acceptance of "final truth."

4. Students are expected to know what plagiarism is and to be aware of the penalties involved. Plagiarism includes prose which does not resemble the student’s authentic writing style as well as more obvious forms of academic theft. (See Appendix).

5. It is expected that students will make an effort to use proper English grammar, style, and spelling in all assignments, including examinations. See Appendix for helpful books. You should imagine yourself on graduation trying to get a job with a major newspaper or magazine (read Point D of the Aims of the Course). Students should not rely solely on ‘spell check’ but should own a good dictionary e.g. Gage Canadian Dictionary.

6. The professor is not responsible for the choice of the room. This is done by bureaucrats armed with computers.

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Sociology 3503 YA 13 Dr. David A. Nock

COURSE OUTLINE 2006/2007

7. Assignments must be handed in on time. A late penalty will apply.

8. Students are advised that personal attendance at classes is correlated with better grades. Material tends to be related from one class to another and attending the occasional class here and there tends to discourage making connections. If you are away having a friend "take notes" may be helpful but it will never be a perfect alternative to your own presence. Empirical Research: "This study made clear that students who attended class more often scored higher on essay and multiple choice examinations than students who attended class less often." Susan Day, "Learning in Large Sociology Classes" Teaching Sociology, v.22, April 1994, p.161.

9. Scholarship should not be a grim matter. Try and enjoy the course. Always remember that what you put in, will influence what you get out of it. Bringing the right attitude of curiosity and interest is more important than the amount of knowledge you possess at the beginning. If you don't have the right attitude, please find another course.

10. To limit disruption to your fellow students, the following has been suggested: turn off cell phones, pagers and watch alarms, restrict conversation to class-related topics and avoid eating and drinking especially when noisy paper or pull-tabs are involved. Such eating and drinking interrupts other students, the instructor--and the student who might be eating and drinking as well! Avoid knitting. In general, avoid diverting your attention or that of others from the objectives of the classroom. Please note, recent research points out the ineffectiveness of so-called “multi-tasking”! Academic work should be treated with the commitment and attention of any valued advanced pursuit.

11. Please arrive in class on time (ideally a little early). Also, students should stay in class until its conclusion. When late arrival or departure is necessary, please do so quietly.

12. Students are encouraged to engage in active reading of personal copies of textbooks-making notes in margins, underlining or circling key words, sentences, concepts, making indexes as you go along.

13. Do not ask the instructor in any fashion whatsoever to raise your grade because you "need" a higher grade. Such requests undermine the entire grading system and in the words of a student quoted in the Toronto Star newspaper, it is not fair to the other students. You alone are responsible for your mark by the quality of your work. This can be improved by conscientious effort aided by one or more of the books listed. (See Appendix on Scholarly Writing and Related Concerns).

14. Students must expect to write exams and tests on the dates set in Thunder Bay.

15. All students must expect to make an oral presentation in class. Sufficient preparation must be made. No alternative arrangements will be accepted.

16. No e-submissions please!

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Sociology 3503 YA 14 Dr. David A. Nock

COURSE OUTLINE 2006/2007

Newsmagazines

Newsweek AP 2 N55

Time AP 2 T58

Macleans AP 5 M16

The Report FC 3651 A53

U.S. News and World Report JK 1 U58

Religious and Humanist or Skeptical Periodicals

Anglican Journal BX 5601 C22

United Church Observer BX 9881 A1U6

The Skeptical Inquirer BF 1001 238

The Library also holds various publications, mainly academic, sponsored by the Roman Catholic, Evangelical, Sikh, Buddhist and Theosophical traditions.

Other non-academic religious, humanist and skeptical periodicals are available at Chapters bookstore and the Thunder Bay Public Library system

Sociology and Social Science Journals or Annuals on Religion

Journal of the Scientific Study of Religion BL 1 J865

Review of Religious Research BL 1 R49

Sociology of Religion HM 1 S12

Research in the Social Scientific Study of Religion BL 60 R48

Social Compass Discontinued

Newspapers (Examples)

The Globe and Mail

National Post

The Toronto Star

The New York Times

Calgary Herald

The Chronicle Journal

The Gazette (Montreal)

The Guardian Weekly (UK)

Ottawa Citizen

The Sunday Times

The Times

Vancouver Sun

Winnipeg Free Press

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Sociology 3503 YA 15 Dr. David A. Nock

COURSE OUTLINE 2006/2007

APPENDIX

Scholarly Writing and Related Concerns

1. A Guide to Writing Sociology Papers by The Sociology Writing Group 1991, 1998.

2. The Sociology Student Writer’s Manual by William A. Johnson, Jr. et al. 1998, 2000, 2002. Copies available at LU Bookstore (Sociology 3401). Recommended.

3. The Students’ Companion to Sociology by Jon Gubbay et al. 1997.

4. Making Sense: a student’s guide to research, writing, and style by Margot Northey, 1983, 1993, 2002. Chapter on oral presentations in 2002 edition. Recommended

5. Making Sense in the Social Sciences: a student’s guide to research, writing, and style by Margot Northey and Lorne Tepperman 1986.

6. A Short Guide to Writing About Social Science by Lee Cuba. 2nd ed. in LU Library. 2002 edition in print (4th ed.). Contains a short chapter on oral presentations.

7. Lambert, Stephen. Great Jobs for Sociology Majors 1997.

8. Stephens, W. Richard Jr. Careers in Sociology. 1999.

9. Oxford, Penguin and Collins Dictionary(ies) of Sociology.

10. Gage or Oxford Canadian Dictionary.

11. Strongly Recommended Website: canberra.edu.au/studyskills/learning/

Students should BUY ONE of the first six books (Numbers 1-6).

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