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1.
Religionsvidenskabeligt Tidsskrift ; - (72):162-172, 2021.
Article in Danish | Scopus | ID: covidwho-1266905

ABSTRACT

First and foremost, the appendix explains the operationalization of the approach of the COVID-19 survey. As background for the articles, which presenting and interpret the analytical results, it also documents specific methodological approaches such as scales of religiosity and wellbeing, and factor-analysis of some of the survey responses. Approaches to content analysis are also delineated. Finally, we acknowledge and discuss the challenges associated with comparing surveys collected at different times and with different sampling approach. © 2021 Aarhus Universitet. All rights reserved.

2.
Religionsvidenskabeligt Tidsskrift ; - (72):157-161, 2021.
Article in Danish | Scopus | ID: covidwho-1266904

ABSTRACT

In public media the COVID-19-pandemic has been framed as a crisis: The cause of social, economic and political crises as well as individual psychological crises. Whereas investigations in other national contexts point to the fact that the pandemic has given rise to a growing interest in religious activities and/or reflections, we find that only a very small minority of Danes are part of this trend. The articles in this special issue document that the majority of the Danish population has been worried about contagion risks. However, they also indicate that religion has played only a marginal role as a coping strategy. One explanation for this is the Danish population's high level of social trust and government trust. Nonetheless, our analyses indicate that this trust level currently is under pressure. © 2021 Aarhus Universitet. All rights reserved.

3.
Religionsvidenskabeligt Tidsskrift ; - (72):137-156, 2021.
Article in Danish | Scopus | ID: covidwho-1266903

ABSTRACT

In the article, we examine Danes' trust in the authorities during the crisis, the relationship between the high degree of trust in the authorities and compliance with the authorities' advice to avoid the spread of infection, and how a growing distrust of society can have consequences for the cohesion in the society, including increasing polarization. The general trust in other people is high in Denmark, and our study shows that trust in the authorities has grown during the pandemic. However, the study shows incipient signs of polarized trust in the population. Religion does not seem to play a role in this development, which instead seems to be associated with material and social insecurity. Research in trust generally indicates that the basis for the strong cohesion that Danish society has shown for decades is precisely trust. If the material and social consequences of the pandemic create fertile ground for change in the level of trust, it can help to create a value setback for the norms that create cohesion in society. © 2021 Aarhus Universitet. All rights reserved.

4.
Religionsvidenskabeligt Tidsskrift ; - (72):68-88, 2021.
Article in Danish | Scopus | ID: covidwho-1266900

ABSTRACT

Personal and societal crises often generate existential or religious questions. The article examines differences between how religiously oriented Danes think about the causes of the coronavirus and how the pandemic should be handled, compared with less religious' Danes. Unsurprisingly, the least-religious Danes are less disturbed by the extended lockdown of faith communities. Further, the article demonstrates that while a minority of Danes is very religious, those who are have a clear sense of social and religious deprivation as a result of COVID restrictions. Many in this group have participated in online community activities, but few consider these to be satisfactory alternatives to physical services. Generally, there is widespread support for the rational and scientific explanation of the virus and how it should be handled, but a minority of the most religious think the virus has divine origin and should be handled by following God's plan. © 2021 Aarhus Universitet. All rights reserved.

5.
Religionsvidenskabeligt Tidsskrift ; - (72):42-67, 2021.
Article in Danish | Scopus | ID: covidwho-1266899

ABSTRACT

In this article, we present the historical and theoretical context informing the investigation into how the COVID-19 pandemic has influenced religiosity in Denmark. We have chosen four foci, each of which contributes to the formation of a historical and theoretical context. First, we embed representations of death within a broad horizon informed by history of religion and cultural history. Beginning with early Christianity's ascent in a cult of the dead and, later, a cult of saints, to the change from burials inside the church to graveyards, we track the coinciding weakening of representations of the afterlife in the modern era. This naturally leads to a discussion of two prior cases in which an epidemic has elicited reactions from Evangelical-Lutheran Church in Denmark: The Cholera epidemic of 1853 and the Spanish Flu in 1918-20. Then we expand our line of inquiry to a more general discussion of how major theories in the Study of Religion have modelled the relation between religion, death and suffering. Following a short introduction to how the human consciousness of death has been conceived as a major causal factor in both the emergence and maintenance of religious beliefs and institutions by major theoreticians of religion, we discuss a number of more recent psychological and sociological theories, that have informed the theoretical foundation of our investigation. In order to capture the praxis dimension of religion, we shortly discuss the particular role of ritual, before, finally presenting the 16 research questions that informed the construction of our survey. © 2021 Aarhus Universitet. All rights reserved.

6.
Religionsvidenskabeligt Tidsskrift ; - (72):19-41, 2021.
Article in Danish | Scopus | ID: covidwho-1266898

ABSTRACT

The population of Denmark had no former expericence with pandemics, meaning that its evaluation of risk and the necessary measures against contagnation were dependent on the dissemination of information through the media. This article uses a media-centric prism to discuss the themes found throughout this special issue, arguing that the Government's use of the media as well as the media's support of rapidly evolving government policies had a decisive impact on the population's response. This argument is supported by a thematically organized discussion of events between 11 March until the early part of October 2020. The themes are the horror raised by the pandemic, the ethical considerations regarding easy and equal access to the health services, unemployment, global warming and, not the least, religion as seen in relation to COVID-19. This last theme is considered in relation to whether the pandemic could be a punishment decided by God or perhaps a personified Nature's revenge due to humans' ill-tratment. The meaning of the prohibition on public rituals and the application of private rituals are considered at last. © 2021 Aarhus Universitet. All rights reserved.

7.
Religionsvidenskabeligt Tidsskrift ; - (72):6-17, 2021.
Article in Danish | Scopus | ID: covidwho-1266897

ABSTRACT

This article offers an overview over the political steps and containment proceedures during the first months of the COVID-19 pandemic in Denmark 2020. © 2021 Aarhus Universitet. All rights reserved.

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