Notes on contributors, Introduction: mapping religion and psychology, PART I: Psychology of religion, SECTION 1: Empirical and cultural approaches, 1. Psychology of religion: an overview, 2. Psychology of religion: empirical approaches, 3. The future is in the return: back to cultural psychology of religion, SECTION 2: Perspectives on modernity and post-modernity, 4. Does (the history of) religion and psychological studies have a subject?, 5. What is our present? An Antipodean perspective on the relationship between psychology and religion, 6. Mapping religion psychologically: information theory as a corrective to modernism, 7. Post-structuralism and the psychology of religion: the challenge of critical psychology, SECTION 3: Psychology, religion, and gender studies, 8. Analysts, critics, and inclusivists: feminist voices in the psychology of religion, 9. Male melancholia: guilt, separation, and repressed rage, PART II: Religion in dialogue with psychology, SECTION 1: Theology and psychology in the West, 10. The past and possible future of religion and psychological studies, 11. Shaping the future of religion and psychology: feminist transformations in pastoral theology, 12. When is religion a mental disorder? The disease of ritual, SECTION 2: Comparative studies: psychological perspectives on non-Western religions, 13. Themes and debates in the psychologycomparativist dialogue, 14. Re-membering a presence of mythological proportions: psychoanalysis and Hinduism, 15. Experimental studies of meditation and consciousness, SECTION 3: Psychology as religion, 16. Diving into the depths: reflections on psychology as a religion, 17. The death awareness movement: psychology as religion?, Index