This work provides a collection of source material on Paganism. It provides a point of reference for key words and concepts, and deals with concepts shared by all Pagans, and also with those concepts unique to a particular Pagan tradition.
This work provides a collection of source material on Paganism. It provides a point of reference for key words and concepts, and deals with concepts shared by all Pagans, and also with those concepts unique to a particular Pagan tradition.
This dictionary is a glossary of terms and a reference work whose entries cover the complex phenomenon of contemporary Paganism. Paganism is now a well-differentiated area of religious growth with important elective affinities with feminism and ecological awareness, and is enjoying increasing public attention. The dictionary is intended for readers interested in Pagan thought and practices, Pagan practitioners, social workers and teachers who come into contact with Pagans and their children, and students in the university sector. There are very limited reliable resources available for students and researchers, despite the increasing popularity of the study of Paganism. This dictionary is therefore a valuable addition to the available academic literature. In addition to courses specifically focussing on Paganism, courses on women and religion, on religion and the environment , on environmental philosophy, and on nature religion will find this book of relevance.The dictionary contains definitions of Pagan terminology and information on key concepts and figures, with a detailed introduction setting out the difficulties in providing definitions of terms whose meanings are often renegotiated by each individual Pagan. This substantive overview essay frames the volume and illuminates the context of the individual entries, which encompass the wide scope of the field covering key figures and concepts from the most well-known Pagan religions: Wicca (witchcraft), Druidry, Asatru, non- aligned Paganism, Goddess worship, and shamanism. Names of appropriate deities are included on the basis of their familiarity and usage (e.g. Aradia and Diana in Wicca; Ceridwen withing Druidry; Odin in Asatru), whilst technical terms and practices, such as invocation' are given underlying definitions and cross-referenced to alternative definitions which are relevant to a specific religion.
' ... Pearson succeeds splendidly in the endeavour she has undertaken and her ability to crystalize and make lucid a complex, messy and multiple social reality is indicative of both experience in and insight into the world of paganism.'
' ... this book will prove an invaluable aid to both the relative newcomer to Paganism and indeed to more experienced scholars ... the information supplied in the book more than withstands close scrutiny and I have no doubt that A Popular Dictionary of Paganism will live up to its title and prove to be just that.' - both by Journal for the Academic Study of Magic
Joanne Pearson
This dictionary provides a readily available collection of source material for a subject which has recently become of considerable public and academic interest. It provides a point of reference for key words and concepts which have previously been available only in short glossaries, footnotes, or within a body of text. It deals with concepts shared by all Pagans, and also with those concepts unique to a particular Pagan tradition.
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