Reprint

For God and Country

Essays on Religion and Nationalism

Edited by
March 2021
170 pages
  • ISBN978-3-03943-905-8 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-03943-906-5 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue For God and Country: Essays on Religion and Nationalism that was published in

Biology & Life Sciences
Social Sciences, Arts & Humanities
Summary
Religion and nationalism are both powerful and important markers of individual identity, but the relationship between the two has been a source of considerable debate. Much, if not most, of the early work done in Nationalism Studies has been based, at least implicitly, on the idea that religion, as a genealogical carrier of identity, was displaced with the advent of secular modernity, which was caused by nationalism. Or, to put it another way, national identity, and its ideological manifestation nationalism, filled the void left in people’s self-identification as religion retreated in the face of modernity. Since at least the late 1990s, this view has been increasingly challenged by scholars trying to account for the apparent persistence of religious identities. Perhaps even more interestingly, scholars of both religion and nationalism have noted that these two kinds of self-identification, while sometimes being tense, as the earlier models explained, are also frequently coexistent or even mutually supportive. This collection of essays explores the current thinking about the relationship between religion and nationalism from a variety of perspectives, using a number of different case studies. What all these approaches have in common is their interest in complicating our understandings of nationalism as a primarily secular phenomenon by bringing religion back into the discussion.
Format
  • Hardback
License
© 2022 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
Christian nationalism; Protestantism; evangelicalism; ecumenical movement; Reinhold Niebuhr; Francis Miller; Christianity and Crisis; axial age; kinship; monolatry; monotheism; nation; priest; religion; territory; nationalism; Tatar; socialism; Islamic reform; Wahhabism; religious nationalism; American Buddhism; God and Country; minority religion in the U.S.; Engaged Buddhism; Romanitas; Hellenitas; Graecitas; Hellene; Greek; Byzantine Empire; identity; consciousness; religious rituals; secular rituals; profane rituals; democratic faith; civil religion; civility; moderation; Orthodox Christianity; autocephaly; religious nationalism; schism; canon law; church–state conflicts; nationalism; Buddhism; Theravāda; non-violence; asceticism; polytheism; Burma; Myanmar; nationalism; religion; Islamism