Religious Identity on the Peripheries: The Dialogical Self in a Global World

Author(s):  
Sunil Bhatia
Numen ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 67 (2-3) ◽  
pp. 226-255
Author(s):  
Jørn Borup

Abstract While historically sharing the characteristics of a universalistic religion and a modernist grand narrative, global Buddhism is mainly the product of a late modern development. Centripetal forces with circulating ideas, practices, and institutions have been part of a liberal market in an open exchange society with “open hermeneutics” and an accessible universal grammar. Its global focus has triggered de-ethnification, de-culturalization, and de-territorialization, claiming transnational universality as a central paradigm fit for a global world beyond isolationalist particularism. However, such seemingly universalist versions of a global Buddhism in recent years, mainly in North America, have been criticized for actually being representations of particular cultures (e.g., “white Buddhism”) with benefits for only particular segments. This article investigates the discourses of this new turn, involving questions of authority, authenticity, identity, cultural appropriation, and representation. It is suggested that criticism of global Buddhism should be seen as typical of what could be called “postglobal Buddhism,” in which identity politics is a frame of reference serving as a centrifugal force, signaling a new phase in “Western Buddhism.” The relevance for the study of religion is further discussed with reflections on how to respond to post-global religious identity politics without being consumed by either stark objectivism or subjectivist go-nativism.


Author(s):  
Anne Hege Grung

This essay discusses the findings of a 2010 Norwegian research project that explored the hermeneutical strategies of Norwegian Muslim and Christian feminist readers as they read the Hagar narrative together. Interestingly, the women employed distinct interpretative reading strategies to develop meaningful interpretations. In their conversations the women addressed religious identity politics, fears in the majority Christian and post-Christian population about Muslims and Islam, feelings of alienation among the Norwegian Muslim minorities, or worries about gender justice in the neoliberal global world. Some readers limited the conversation to the canonical texts of their respective religious tradition whereas other readers explored the intertextuality of relevant Christian and Muslim texts. The women readers understood that their particular religious understanding of the Hagar story was incomplete if they did not know the interpretative tradition of the other religious community. Overall, then, the study yields important insights about interreligious readings of the Bible, Qur’an, and the Hadith for a religiously and socially diverse society such as Norway.


2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kristin Ann Broussard ◽  
Helen C. Harton ◽  
Carol Tweten ◽  
Allie Thompson ◽  
Alexia Farrell ◽  
...  

2006 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michele Schlehofer ◽  
Janice Adelman ◽  
Robert Blagg ◽  
Allen Omoto

2016 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 342-353
Author(s):  
Zeynep Arslan

Through comparative literature research and qualitative analysis, this article considers the development of Alevi identity and political agency among the diaspora living in a European democratic context. This affects the Alevi emergence as political actors in Turkey, where they have no official recognition as a distinct religious identity. New questions regarding their identity and their aspiration to be seen as a political actor confront this ethno-religious group defined by common historical trauma, displacement, massacre, and finally emigration.


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