<i>The Bloomsbury Reader in Religion and Childhood</i> is a welcome addition to the burgeoning literature on children and religious literature … As it is, this Reader has a wide-reachability through its select readings on media, materialism, education, citizenship, freedom, religions, and childhood. Therefore, it is an excellent go-to work for teachers, students, and readers who are interested in the field of religions and childhood.
Reading Religion
This collection of very readable, yet thought-provoking intellectual primary source materials, is a rich interdisciplinary resource. I recommend that this book forms a key component of study for anyone interested in religion, history, sociology or education and the intersection between these disciplines and ‘childhood’.
Educational Review
It is the purpose of a Reader to ask more questions than it answers, and this particular collection succeeds admirably in its stated aims ... The heart of the volume lies in sociological approaches to contemporary and near-contemporary religious and educational discourse, coupled with some sensitive readings of earlier twentieth-century practices. In both these core areas, the Reader provides a fascinating, timely and useful contribution to debate.
History of Education
This book is the carefully-prepared, richly-outfitted herald of a whole new field of study. It which will change the way we look at religion, children, our societies and ourselves.
Linda Woodhead, Professor of Sociology of Religion, Lancaster University, UK
Bringing together a range of classic and contemporary work into a coherent and well-structured format, The Bloomsbury Reader in Religion and Childhood is an essential text for students and researchers alike. Its substantive breadth and intellectual depth provide much needed consolidation for this important but often neglected field of study.
Peter Hemming, Lecturer in Social Sciences, Cardiff University, UK
An excellent collection of primary sources with commentary [that] fills an important gap between texts about RE pedagogy and scholarly studies of religion.
David Lundie, University of St Mark & St John, UK