Civil society, religion, and the nation : modernization in intercultural context : Russia, Japan, Turkey
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Civil society, religion, and the nation : modernization in intercultural context : Russia, Japan, Turkey
(Studien zur interkulturellen Philosophie = Studies in intercultural philosophy = Études de philosophie interculturelle / series editor, Heinz Kimmerle, Ram Adhar Mall, 14)
Rodopi, 2004
- : pbk
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Note
International conference proceedings: 'Religion, Civil Society, and the Nation' Expert Meeting held at Ravenstein, 2002
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Japan, Russia, and Turkey are major examples of countries with different ethnic, religious, and cultural background that embarked on the path of modernization without having been colonized by a Western country. In all three cases, national consciousness has played a significant role in this context. The project of Modernity is obviously of European origin, but is it essentially European? Does modernization imply loss of a country's cultural or national identity? If so, what is the "fate" of the modernization process in these cases? The presence of the idea and reality of civil society can be considered a real marker of Modernity in this respect, because it presupposes the development of liberalism, individualism and human rights. But are these compatible with nationalism and with the idea of a national religion?
These questions are the more pressing, as Japan is considered part of the Western world in many respects, and Russia and Turkey are defining their relation to the European Union in different ways. An investigation of these three countries, set off against more general reflections, sheds light on the possibilities or limitations of modernization n a non-European context.
Table of Contents
Preface
Introduction
Part I Russia
Pauline SCHROOYEN: Modernization in Late Imperial Russia: Some Critical Reflections on and Suggestions for the Study of Russian Society
Marina BYKOVA: Nation and Nationalism. Russia in Search of its National Identity
Jonathan SUTTON: Civil Society, Religion, and the Nation. Reflections on the Russian Case
Hans OVERSLOOT: Towards a Revival of the State as an Ideology in Contemporary Russia
Part II Japan
Paul KEVENHOERSTER: Civil Society, Religion, and the Nation: The Case of Japan
Tetsuo NAJITA: Civil Society in Japan's Modernity - An Interpretive Overview
Rikki KERSTEN: Maruyama Masao and the Dilemma of the Public Intellectual in Postwar Japan
Inken PROHL: Religion and National Identity in Contemporary Japan
Part III Turkey
Inken PROHL: Religion and National Identity in Contemporary Japan
Part III Turkey
Gerrit STEUNEBRINK: Liberalism and Nationalism in Europe and Turkey: On the Reception and Application of Modern European Ideas in a New Historical and Cultural Context
Yasin CEYLAN: The Conflict between State and Religion in Turkey
Ayse KADIOGLU: Citizenship and Individuation in Turkey: The Triumph of Will over Reason
Akin ERGUEDEN: Doing Things with Metaphor: The Ru(o)le of Metaphor in the Formation of the Grammar of the Public Sphere in Turkey
Part IV General Perspectives
Peter van der VEER: Religion, Nation and the Public Sphere
Machiel KARSKENS: Nationalism as Political Strategy Contrary to Civil Society
Evert van der ZWEERDE: ... But Where Is the State?
On the Contributors
Index
by "Nielsen BookData"