Abstract
AbstractThe nature of secularization is of enduring interest in the social science of religion. Numerous recent papers have established downward cohort trends as characterizing religious change. We examine potential mechanisms by assessing cultural participation and secular engagement during the formative period of one cohort. We provide estimates of active and nominal religiosity, nonreligion and religious belief for those born between 1933 and 1942, using multiple surveys fielded between 1957 and 2018. We model the association between religiosity and secular cultural and social participation for this cohort in 1957, then examine how cultural socialization in childhood relates to religiosity in their later adulthood using surveys fielded between 2005 and 2007. Increased secular competition is found to be associated with less active religiosity. These trends were underpinned by an ethic of increasing autonomy for the young. We conclude by affirming the link between increasing secular competition, long‐run modernization, and changing cultural socialization.
Highlights
What are the mechanisms of secularization? Modernization, rationalization, urbanization, the rise of industrial society, and declining existential insecurity have been posited as distal causes by those working within a secularization paradigm (Bruce 2011; Norris and Inglehart 2004)
This finding and interpretation is consistent with what we observe in the 1957 survey: secular social and cultural opportunities are associated with lower religiosity or religious practice
To explicate mechanisms for downward cohort change, we examined a particular cohort in detail, using cross-sectional surveys fielded in their adolescence and early youth, and in later life
Summary
The nature of secularization is of enduring interest in the social science of religion. We examine potential mechanisms by assessing cultural participation and secular engagement during the formative period of one cohort. We provide estimates of active and nominal religiosity, nonreligion and religious belief for those born between 1933 and 1942, using multiple surveys fielded between 1957 and 2018. We model the association between religiosity and secular cultural and social participation for this cohort in 1957, examine how cultural socialization in childhood relates to religiosity in their later adulthood using surveys fielded between 2005 and 2007. Increased secular competition is found to be associated with less active religiosity. These trends were underpinned by an ethic of increasing autonomy for the young. We conclude by affirming the link between increasing secular competition, long-run modernization, and changing cultural socialization
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have