Tolerance, secularization and democratic politics in South Asia

Bibliographic Information

Tolerance, secularization and democratic politics in South Asia

edited by Humeira Iqtidar, Tanika Sarkar

Cambridge University Press, 2018

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Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

What is the relationship between secularization and tolerance? Critically analyzing the empirical and theoretical foundations of a putatively linear relationship between the two, this volume argues for moving past both romanticised readings of pre-modern tolerance and the unthinking belief that secularization will inevitably lead to tolerance. The essays collected in this volume include contributions from across South Asia that suggest that democratic politics have added a layer of complexity to questions of peaceful co-existence. Modern transformations in religious thought and practice have had contradictory implications for tolerance, which offer rich insights into contemporary debates in the region. This multi-disciplinary volume, which spans history, sociology, anthropology and political theory, questions the uncritical acceptance of tolerance as the best framework for engaging with difference, and probes the complications created by and through democratic politics.

Table of Contents

  • 1. Introduction Humeira Iqtidar and Tanika Sarkar
  • 2. Languages of secularity Sudipta Kaviraj
  • 3. Secularization of politics: Muslim nationalism and sectarian conflict in South Asia Sadia Saeed
  • 4. Temple building in secularizing Nepal: materializing religion and ethnicity in a state of transformation Sara Shneiderman
  • 5. Secularization and 'constitutive moments': insights from partition diplomacy in South Asia Joya Chatterji
  • 6. Tolerance in Bangladesh: discourses of state and society Samia Huq
  • 7. In the void of faith: Sunnyata, sovereignty, minority Aishwary Kumar
  • 8. Pillayar and the politicians: secularization and toleration at the end of Sri Lanka's Civil War Jonathan Spencer.

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