This review article aims to reflect on the history of religion at home through testing the comparative promise of the Bloomsbury series A Cultural History of the Home. Through an extensive reflection on six historical periods of western history, the reader encounters key ideas about the historical-specific demarcation of the home, gender roles, and the domestic religious objects and practices that came to co-define those boundaries. Despite the comparative layout of the series, and the excellent contributions, A Cultural History of the Home never engages in explicit comparisons across the volumes, leaving space for future comparative work in the study of religion, gender and material culture.
CITATION STYLE
Brand, M. (2023). Writing a cultural history of religion at home. Studies in Religion-Sciences Religieuses, 52(2), 201–215. https://doi.org/10.1177/00084298221124522
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