1. The Difference Engine: Liberation and the Rave Imaginary Graham St John
2. Ephemeral Spirit: Sacrificial Cyborg and Communal Soul Hillegonda C. Rietveld
3. Raptures: the 'Instituant' Religious Experience of Rave François Gauthier
4. 'Connectedness' and the Rave Experience: Rave as New Religious Movement? Tim Olaveson
5. The Flesh of Raving: Merleau-Ponty and the 'Experience' of Ecstacy James Landau
6. Entheogenic Dance Ecstasis: Cross-cultural Contexts Des Tramacchi
7. The 'Natural High': Altered States, Flashbacks and Neural Tuning at Raves Melanie Takahashi
8. Selecting Ritual: DJ's Dancers and Liminality in Underground Dance Music Morgan Gerard
9. Sounds of the London Underground: Gospel Music and Baptist Worship in the UK Garage Scene Ciaran O'Hagan
10. Gamelan, Techno-Primitivism and the San Francisco Rave Scene Gina Andrea Fatone
11. Techno Millennium: Dance, Ecology and Future Primitives Graham St John
12. Global Nomads: Techno and New Age as Transnational Countercultures in Ibiza and Goa Anthony D'Andrea
13. Hedonic Tantra: Golden Goa's Trance Transmission Erik Davis
14. Goa Trance and Trance in Goa: Smooth Striations Arun Saldanha
15. Dancing on Common Ground: Exploring the Sacred at Burning Man Robert V. Kozinets and John F. Sherry, Jr.
Graham St John is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow in Interactive Media and Production at the University of Regina, and a Research Associate at the Centre for Critical and Cultural Studies, Universoty of Queensland. His book Technomad: Global Raving Countercultures will be published with Equinox in September 2009. His previous publications include the edited collection Victor Turner and Contemporary Cultural Performance (Berghahn 2008).
"Rave Culture and Religion is a smart book collecting essays many
by emerging scholars and graduate students who, in personally
experiencing rave culture, find immediate and urgent applicability
for the academic theories they are reading. To link rave and
religion will hopefully prove shocking enough to the established
academic study of religion to open new discussions about religion
and popular culture. To link rave and sophisticated academic study
will hopefully be shocking enough to a few ravers to lead them to
see beyond a simple-minded fuzzy understanding of the power and
importance of what they are experiencing."- Professor Sam Gill,
University of Colorado at Boulder
Rave Culture and Religion is a smart book colleting essays many by
emerging scholars and graduate students who, in personally
experiencing rave culture, find immediate and urgent applicability
for the academic theories they are reading. To link rave and
religion will hopefully prove shocking enough to the established
academic study of religion to open new discussions about religion
and popular culture. To link rave and sophisticated academic study
will hopefully be shocking enough to a few ravers to lead them to
see beyond a simple-minded fuzzy understanding of the power and
importance of what they are experiencing. - Professor Sam Gill,
University of Colorado at Boulder.
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