Abstract
I argue that the role of the ‘seeker’ and practices of ‘seeking’, especially (but not only) in the field of New Spiritualities, constitute a late modern tradition of practice. Rather than a personal and idiosyncratic form of behaviour with minimal salience, seeking is better understood as a collective mode of thought and practice by means of which receptive subjects adapt to the radical pluralisation of late modern religious authorities. To support my case I discuss three vernacular biographies from different regions of the UK as post-1945 case studies. Drawing on a theoretical framework based in the work of Vladimir Propp and Walter Burkert, I argue that, despite substantive differences, each biography shares a common structure of a search for symbolic goods in the face of multiple competing authorities. I conclude that seeking is a late modern vernacular tradition with historical and anthropological roots.
Original language | English |
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Title of host publication | Vernacular Knowledge |
Subtitle of host publication | Contesting Authority, Expressing Beliefs |
Editors | Ülo Valk, Marion Bowman |
Place of Publication | Sheffield |
Publisher | Equinox Publishers |
Chapter | 9 |
Pages | 214-236 |
ISBN (Electronic) | 9781800502147 |
ISBN (Print) | 9781781792360, 9781781792377 |
Publication status | Published - 24 Oct 2022 |