Chapter 1: An Introduction to the Psychology of Religion and Place<div>Part I. Theoretical and Methodological Perspectives</div><div>Chapter 2: Sacred Places: The presence of the past</div><div>Chapter 3: Religion, Place, and Attachment: An evaluation of conceptual frameworks</div><div>Chapter 4: Embodied Spirituality Following Disaster: Exploring the intersections of religious and place attachment in resilience and meaning making</div><div>Chapter 5: The Psychology and Theology of Place: A perspective from the Judeo-Christian tradition</div><div>Chapter 6: Pride of Place in a Religious Context: An environmental psychology and sociology perspective</div><div>Chapter 7: Mapping the visible and invisible topographies of place and landscape through sacred mobilities</div><div>Chapter 8: ‘A Dwelling Place for Dragons’: Wild places in mythology and folklore</div><div>Chapter 9: Religious and Place Attachment: A cascade of parallel processes</div><div>Chapter 10: God and Place as Attachment ‘Figures’ – A critical examination</div><div>Part II. Empirical Applications and Practical Implications</div><div>Chapter 11: Religion, Well-being, and Therapeutic Landscape</div><div>Chapter 12: “To Him I Commit My Spirit”: Attachment to God, the Land and the People as a Means of Dealing with Crises in Gaza Strip</div><div>Chapter 13: Glimpses of a Place Spirituality in American Filmmaker John Sayles’ Limbo: Authenticity, inauthenticity, and modes of place engagement</div><div>Chapter 14: Place-Making and Religion: A solidarity psychology of the commons</div><div>Chapter 15: How and Why Environmental and Religious Attachment Matters for Quality of Life</div><div>Chapter 16: Defining the psychology of religion and place: A concept analysis</div><div>Index</div>