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In this fascinating interpretation of contemporary culture and theology, Harvey Cox examines both the loss and reemergence of festivity and fantasy in Western civilization. He evaluates both processes from a theological perspective, defining festivity as the capacity for genuine revelry and joyous celebration and defining fantasy as the faculty for envisioning radically alternative life situations. t speaks directly to such contemporary movements as the theology of hope, the rapidly disappearing radical theology, and the theology of culture. For many it will provide a new perspective on the renewal of religious life and the secular search for religious experience.
The debate on the role and influence of the local press on city government and politics has often been seriously hindered by a lack of detailed information. This 1973 book improved the situation by studying the role of the provincial daily and weekly press in the life of a community, focusing on six papers in Merseyside during the 1960s.
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