Religion and Politics in International Relations: The Modern Myth

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A&C Black, Oct 27, 2011 - Religion - 296 pages
Scholars in International Relations concerned with religion and its relations to world politics are rhetorically constructing a powerful modern myth. A component of this myth is that religion is inherently violent and irrational unless controlled by the secular state, which is inherently rational and only reluctantly violent. Timothy Fitzgerald discusses how, in this modern myth, "religion" appears as a force of nature which either assists or threatens the sacred secular order of things, and how religion is portrayed as a kind of universal essence which takes many forms, its recent most dangerous manifestation being "Islamic terrorism". This book illustrates that the essential distinction between irrational religion and rational secular politics appears as an unquestioned preconception on the basis of which policy is conducted, countries invaded and wars fought. Arguing that this rhetorical construction of religion provides the foundation for faith in the rationality of modern liberal capitalism, Fitzgerald demonstrates how a historically contingent discourse has been transformed into a powerful set of global assumptions.
 

Contents

Acknowledgements
Religion is not a Standalone Category
Summary of the Contents of the Chapters
Why the Focus on Religion in International Relations?
Contextualizing the Problem in the Authors Research Background
Summary of the Argument
How Religion Poisons Everything
Radical Religious and Violent
The Return from Exile
Religion Resurging
The Politics of Secularism
Some Further Theoretical Implications
Bibliography
Index
Copyright

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About the author (2011)

Timothy Fitzgerald is Reader in Religion at the University of Stirling, UK. He is the author of The Ideology of Religious Studies (2000).

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