Soper, Fetzer - Religion and Nationalism in Global Perspective
Related
Related to Nagel, Ferran - Politics of Religion and Nationalism
Summary
Religion and nationalism can be carved into 3 sections:
- Civil-Religious
- Religious Nationalism
- Secular Nationalism
Can further be divided into stable and unstable components
Introduction
Model | Religion-state ideological links | Religion-state institutional links |
---|---|---|
Secular nationalism | Weak to nonexistent | Separation |
Religious nationalism | Strong (with a particular group) | Multiple religion-state contacts (to a particular group) |
Civil-religious nationalism | Supportive (to religion in general) | Benign separation or pluralistic accomodation |
- Launa of studies when it comes to nationalism and religion
- Historically
- Modenrists focus their attention on the role of language, the print media, and educational system
- Gellner notes “curious fact” about nations and religion
- Westphalian system subordinates religion to the state
- iraq’s westphalian system continues with this to today
- Secular nationalism replaced ethnic and religious identity for national identity based on civic and secular norms
- friendly “takeover” of religion by nationalism
- “Post-colonial states like india and turkey aggressively forged secular nationalism”
- Walzer notes that the revival of religion in algeria, india, and israel represents rejection of secular nationalism
- ireland has strong religious identity
- “secular nationalism presumes the triumph of national over religious identity” - pg 8
- “civil religious nationalism is rooted in the country’s religious experience, but nevertheless develops separately from it”
- falls short in capturing every regime
- “Religious nationalism can occur when religious groups are socially and politically strong and have some degree of institutional autonomy” - pg 15
- bosnia has this, where lack of religious accomodation has lead to the rise of religious identities
- Religion and state are not static, their discourses change over time
- “We hypothesize that members of the majority faith are likely to express pro-nationalist sentiments in states with religious nationalism as its model, though this archetype runs the danger of alienating minority faiths” - pg 29
united states: Stable Civil-Religious Nationalism
- US was founded by a mixed group of christians, sects varying wildly
- US constitution specifices the relationship of state and gov
- Gov does not interfere with religion, which allows them to spread
- No anticlerical revolution like in france
- US cares about being “generically” religious, not specifically the sect
- US religious identity has morphed, adopting Jews and Catholics along the way
- Religious groups were far more likely to support the Iraq war
- Evanglicals especially
israel: Unstable Civil-Religious Nationalism
- Israel’s founding brought together Zionists and Jews of all stripes
- Failed to adopt a constitution, leaving the Basic Law
- Ambiguity of the Basic Law has lead differing interpretations of religion and the state
- Ben Gurion was not particularly religious and more socialist, but various different leaders have taken tacks
- Ultra-Orthodox jews even reject the Zionist project
- Political Zionism vs cultural Zionism vs Revisionism vs theological Zionism
- Deeply debated in Israeli society, balance of power in the Knesset has been razor thin, which puts Zionists at the kingmaker role
- Zionists more likely to favor state aid to settlements
greece: Stable Religious Nationalism
- Greence has long history with religion, founding of the state from ottoman empire has revisionist tendencies about the role of the orthodox church
- Church hailed as the savior of faith under ottoman rule
- Similar to other Balkan states, described in Anscombe - State, Faith, and Nation
- Church hailed as the savior of faith under ottoman rule
- Orthodox Church has very heavy input on educational policy
- Most Greeks see religion as an important part of their identity
- Colors their views on Greece/Turkey relations, especially after the 1934 population exchanges
malaysia: Unstable Religious Nationalism
- Constitution theoritically coded towards Islam, although in general is not
- Recent leaders have attempted to appeal to native Malays and Islam, against Indian and Chinese minorities
- Most native Malays very poor, Chinese tend to be urban and rich, Indians somewhere in between
- Constitution amendments does privilage Malays to some extent
- Rukun Negara was meant to harmonize these changes
- Hostility to China is not a major change among religions, except Christianity
- Malaysia forcing established Islam onto the state towards powerful minorities has dangerous ramificiations
uruguay: Stable Secular Nationalism
- Relatively backwater among Catholics during Spanish rule
- Had large anticlerical moment
- Most people not religious, and stable because the religious base was never built up against the state
india: Unstable Secular Nationalism
- Powerful religious actors at the construction of the state
- Indira Ghdani and Rajiv Ghandi both spoke about secularism, but appealed to Hindu nationalism when needed
- bharatiya janata party (bjp) largely appeals to Hindu nationalism
- Secularism has appeal on the national discourse level, BJP attempts to mix Hindu identity with an Indian one
- Normative values of secularism being overriden by powerful religious actors
- goes against the idea that with time, a secular state imposed from top down will secularize the population