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Religion and extremism : rejecting diversity / Douglas Pratt.

Van Pelt Library BL65.P7 P726 2018
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Pratt, Douglas, author.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Religion and politics.
Radicalism--Religious aspects.
Radicalism.
Religious fanaticism.
Violence--Religious aspects.
Violence.
Physical Description:
vii, 196 pages ; 25 cm
Place of Publication:
London, UK ; New York, NY : Bloomsbury Academic, 2018.
Summary:
Despite a popular focus on Islam, it is not just some Muslims who are violent; extremist Jews and Christians can also enact terror and destruction. Douglas Pratt addresses the question of religion and extremism, focussing on the three so-called 'monotheistic' religions of Judaism, Christianity and Islam. Religion and Extremism: Rejecting Diversity argues that a rejection of Absolutism, results in extreme behaviours and increasingly, in hardening social and religious responses. Arguably all, and especially theistic, religions are concerned with the Absolute and notions such as absolute truth, values, and communal unity. For Christianity, the motif of one Lord, one baptism, one Church. For Islam, the juxtaposition of belief in one God, the Qur'an as the Word of God, and the Ummah as the singular community of Muslims. For Jews it is perhaps the gift of Torah, observant practice, and the sense of communal solidarity through the vicissitudes of history. Douglas Pratt argues that however expressed, the motif of the 'Absolute' is central to all, but how that absolute is and has been received, interpreted and responded to, is a matter of great diversity. Each religion is historically pluriform, yet each can show expressions of absolutism in which variety of interpretation is excluded, leading to extremism. Arguing that 'Absolutism' reveals an underlying dynamic in which religions may lead to extremism, the author concludes with a discussion of contemporary mutual extremism and how extremism may be countered.
Contents:
Accommodating diversity: paradigms and patterns
Diversity resisted: exclusion and fundamentalism
Texts of terror: scriptural motifs for extremism
The Jewish experience of extremism
Forms of Christian extremism
Trajectories of Islamic extremism
Mutual extremism: reactive co-radicalization
Extremism and Islamophobia.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:
9781474292252
1474292259
9781474292245
1474292240
OCLC:
967029220

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