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   <front>
      <journal-meta>
         <journal-id>ZYGO</journal-id>
         <journal-title-group>
            <journal-title>Zygon®</journal-title>
            <abbrev-journal-title/>
         </journal-title-group>
         <issn pub-type="print">0591-2385</issn>
         <issn pub-type="electronic">1467-9744</issn>
      </journal-meta>
      <article-meta>
         <article-id pub-id-type="doi">10.1111/j.1467-9744.2006.00776.x</article-id>
         <title-group>
            <article-title>MUTATIONS OF NATURE, TECHNOLOGY, AND THE WESTERN SACRED</article-title>
         </title-group>
         <contrib-group>
            <contrib contrib-type="author">
               <name name-style="western">
                  <surname>Kull</surname>
                  <given-names>Anne</given-names>
               </name>
            </contrib>
         </contrib-group>
         <aff id="a1"/>
         <pub-date publication-format="electronic" iso-8601-date="2006-12-02">
            <day>02</day>
            <month>12</month>
            <year>2006</year>
         </pub-date>
         <volume>41</volume>
         <issue>4</issue>
         <issue-id pub-id-type="doi">10.1111/zygo.2006.41.issue-4</issue-id>
         <fpage>785</fpage>
         <lpage>792</lpage>
         <permissions/>
         <abstract>
            <p>Bronislaw Szerszynski's book Nature, Technology and the Sacred (2005) challenges us to think of nature, technology, and the sacred in a genuinely novel way. The sacred is the context and the protagonist, not a passive, unchanging, vague phenomenon. Both nature and technology will be better interpreted in the context of the transformations of the sacred.</p>
         </abstract>
         <kwd-group>
            <kwd>change</kwd>
            <kwd>creativity</kwd>
            <kwd>nature</kwd>
            <kwd>sacred</kwd>
            <kwd>techno‐demonology</kwd>
            <kwd>technology</kwd>
         </kwd-group>
         <counts/>
      </article-meta>
   </front>
   <body/>
   <back>
      <ref-list>
         <ref id="b1">
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         <ref id="b3">
            <mixed-citation id="cit3" publication-type="book">Szerszynski, Bronislaw. 2005. Nature, Technology and the Sacred. 
            Oxford
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</mixed-citation>
         </ref>
         <ref id="b4">
            <mixed-citation id="cit4" publication-type="journal">Szerszynski, Bronislaw. 2006. “Techno‐Demonology: Naming, Understanding and Redeeming the a/Human Agencies with Which We Share Our World. 
<source>Ecotheology 
        </source>11:57–75.
</mixed-citation>
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   </back>
</article>
