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Med kroppen som instrument : en studie av new age med fokus på hälsa, kroppslighet och genus

Löwendahl, Lena LU (2002) In Lund Studies in History of Religions 15.
Abstract
In this thesis New Age is studied from a sociological perspective, with a focus on health, body, and gender. One purpose is to examine how people within New Age view and relate to these problem areas. A parallel purpose is to find explanations to why women predominantly take an interest in New Age, and to discover how these explanations are related to the view on health, body and gender. The subjects in the thesis are discussed with the help of sociological theory, as well as 28 qualitative interviews with men and women interested in New Age. Topics discussed at the interviews were health, body, conventional medicine, alternative methods and interpretations of masculinity and femininity. The reasons why people take an interest in New Age... (More)
In this thesis New Age is studied from a sociological perspective, with a focus on health, body, and gender. One purpose is to examine how people within New Age view and relate to these problem areas. A parallel purpose is to find explanations to why women predominantly take an interest in New Age, and to discover how these explanations are related to the view on health, body and gender. The subjects in the thesis are discussed with the help of sociological theory, as well as 28 qualitative interviews with men and women interested in New Age. Topics discussed at the interviews were health, body, conventional medicine, alternative methods and interpretations of masculinity and femininity. The reasons why people take an interest in New Age can partly be explained from these subjects, but also in the life stories of the interviewees.



The study shows that health generally was considered the individual’s normal state, which exists when everything is in balance. Health contains mental as well as transcendental factors, which sometimes includes religious elements. The body was generally viewed as secondary in relation to mental and transcendental factors, even though physical sensations legitimize different therapies and techniques. This turns the body into an instrument whose ability to feel and experience has great importance for how the individual interprets and creates her existence. Men and women speak in similar ways about health, but for women the body is more central.



People’s interest in New Age in Swedish society can be linked to an increased pluralism, but also to extensive secularization. Both of these factors play a large role in the rise of new religious practices. The emphasis on abundant individual choice makes the New Age movement fit the late-modern individual’s reflexivity and individualism. In addition, many of the concepts within New Age, can be seen as reactions against the rationality and science of the modern era, expressed through conventional medicine and institutionalized religion. Furthermore, alternative methods in New Age provide a sense of control, which is an important part of the late-modern body-oriented culture.



It is possible to see New Age as a free zone, where women can seek subject status on their own terms without having to affirm traditional male norms. Men within New Age are generally critical to the hegemonic masculinity. They set a standard for an alternative male role by expressing the feminine and “soft” values within them. (Less)
Abstract (Swedish)
Popular Abstract in Swedish

I denna avhandling studeras new age utifrån problemområdena hälsa, kroppslighet och genus. Genom intervjuer med andliga sökare inom new age ges en bild av de trosföreställningar och attityder som kännetecknar rörelsen. Också sökarnas olika vägar till new age och relationer till andra religioner analyseras. I det senmoderna samhället är hälsa ett eftersträvansvärt livsvärde och kroppen ett formbart objekt. Synen på hälsa och kroppslighet inom new age ställs i relation till denna samtida kroppskultur, men också till samhälleliga skeenden som individualisering och sekularisering.



Undersökningen visar att människans själsliga delar ofta betonas framför kroppsligheten inom new age.... (More)
Popular Abstract in Swedish

I denna avhandling studeras new age utifrån problemområdena hälsa, kroppslighet och genus. Genom intervjuer med andliga sökare inom new age ges en bild av de trosföreställningar och attityder som kännetecknar rörelsen. Också sökarnas olika vägar till new age och relationer till andra religioner analyseras. I det senmoderna samhället är hälsa ett eftersträvansvärt livsvärde och kroppen ett formbart objekt. Synen på hälsa och kroppslighet inom new age ställs i relation till denna samtida kroppskultur, men också till samhälleliga skeenden som individualisering och sekularisering.



Undersökningen visar att människans själsliga delar ofta betonas framför kroppsligheten inom new age. Detta ger kroppen karaktären av ett instrument för att uppnå exempelvis personlig utveckling eller hälsa. Varför flertalet andliga sökare är kvinnor står delvis att finna i rörelsens fokusering på hälsa och helande. En annan förklaring är att new age kommit att fungera som en samtida kvinnorörelse genom att ta fasta på traditionella kvinnliga värden. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
supervisor
opponent
  • Docent Åkesson, Lynn, Department of European Ethnology, Lund University
organization
alternative title
Your Body as an Instrument : A Study of New Age with a Focus on Health, Body and Gender
publishing date
type
Thesis
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Nutidshistoria (från 1914), Contemporary history (since 1914), Teologi, Theology, life story., qualitative interviews, reflexivity, relativism, individualism, gender, alternative methods, body/physicality, New Age, health, Sociology, Sociologi
in
Lund Studies in History of Religions
volume
15
pages
336 pages
publisher
Almqvist & Wiksell International
defense location
Edens hörsal, Paradisgatan 5, Lund.
defense date
2002-03-22 10:15:00
ISSN
1103-4882
ISBN
91-22-01952-9
language
Swedish
LU publication?
yes
additional info
The information about affiliations in this record was updated in December 2015. The record was previously connected to the following departments: Sociology of Religion (015017042)
id
5b8d6d2b-fdd5-4664-8d5a-8a61326c0e7d (old id 27780)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 16:43:40
date last changed
2019-05-21 19:38:55
@phdthesis{5b8d6d2b-fdd5-4664-8d5a-8a61326c0e7d,
  abstract     = {{In this thesis New Age is studied from a sociological perspective, with a focus on health, body, and gender. One purpose is to examine how people within New Age view and relate to these problem areas. A parallel purpose is to find explanations to why women predominantly take an interest in New Age, and to discover how these explanations are related to the view on health, body and gender. The subjects in the thesis are discussed with the help of sociological theory, as well as 28 qualitative interviews with men and women interested in New Age. Topics discussed at the interviews were health, body, conventional medicine, alternative methods and interpretations of masculinity and femininity. The reasons why people take an interest in New Age can partly be explained from these subjects, but also in the life stories of the interviewees.<br/><br>
<br/><br>
The study shows that health generally was considered the individual’s normal state, which exists when everything is in balance. Health contains mental as well as transcendental factors, which sometimes includes religious elements. The body was generally viewed as secondary in relation to mental and transcendental factors, even though physical sensations legitimize different therapies and techniques. This turns the body into an instrument whose ability to feel and experience has great importance for how the individual interprets and creates her existence. Men and women speak in similar ways about health, but for women the body is more central.<br/><br>
<br/><br>
People’s interest in New Age in Swedish society can be linked to an increased pluralism, but also to extensive secularization. Both of these factors play a large role in the rise of new religious practices. The emphasis on abundant individual choice makes the New Age movement fit the late-modern individual’s reflexivity and individualism. In addition, many of the concepts within New Age, can be seen as reactions against the rationality and science of the modern era, expressed through conventional medicine and institutionalized religion. Furthermore, alternative methods in New Age provide a sense of control, which is an important part of the late-modern body-oriented culture.<br/><br>
<br/><br>
It is possible to see New Age as a free zone, where women can seek subject status on their own terms without having to affirm traditional male norms. Men within New Age are generally critical to the hegemonic masculinity. They set a standard for an alternative male role by expressing the feminine and “soft” values within them.}},
  author       = {{Löwendahl, Lena}},
  isbn         = {{91-22-01952-9}},
  issn         = {{1103-4882}},
  keywords     = {{Nutidshistoria (från 1914); Contemporary history (since 1914); Teologi; Theology; life story.; qualitative interviews; reflexivity; relativism; individualism; gender; alternative methods; body/physicality; New Age; health; Sociology; Sociologi}},
  language     = {{swe}},
  publisher    = {{Almqvist & Wiksell International}},
  school       = {{Lund University}},
  series       = {{Lund Studies in History of Religions}},
  title        = {{Med kroppen som instrument : en studie av new age med fokus på hälsa, kroppslighet och genus}},
  volume       = {{15}},
  year         = {{2002}},
}