Fundamentalisms Comprehended

Front Cover
University of Chicago Press, Oct 15, 1995 - Political Science - 522 pages
This volume marks the culmination of the Fundamentalism Project, a landmark series that brings together scholars from around the world to explore the nature and impact of fundamentalist movements in the twentieth century. Based on an interdisciplinary program conducted by the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the series is dedicated to promoting an understanding of fundamentalism at a time when misinformation and misperceptions have exacerbated national and international conflicts.

The four previous volumes provide the most comprehensive information available on the social, political, cultural, and religious contexts of fundamentalism in the major religious traditions. In this fifth volume, the distinguished contributors return to and test the project's beginning premise: that fundamentalisms in all faiths share certain "family resemblances." Several of the essays reconsider the project's original definition of fundamentalism as a reactive, absolutist, and comprehensive mode of anti-secular religious activism. Some contributors challenge the idea that fundamentalism is a distinctively modern phenomenon, while others question whether the term "fundamentalist" can accurately be applied to movements outside Christianity, Judaism, and Islam. Several of the essays also employ new approaches, drawn from literary criticism and from psychology, in their assessments of the problems of comparing fundamentalisms.

"Fundamentalisms Comprehended" concludes with a capstone statement by R. Scott Appleby, Emmanuel Sivan, and Gabriel Almond that builds upon the entire Fundamentalism Project. Identifying different categories of fundamentalist movements, and delineating four distinct patterns offundamentalist behavior toward outsiders, this statement provides an explanatory framework for understanding and comparing fundamentalisms around the world.

 

Contents

Fundamentalisms
1
The Enclave Culture
11
List of Contributors 505
66
The Vision from the Madrasa and Bes
71
Mapping Indic Fundamentalisms through
96
Unity and Diversity in Islamic
179
Psychosocial Profiles
199
Buddhism Nationhood and Cultural
231
Fundamentalism Phenomenology and
259
Whats So Funny about Fundamentalism?
321
Antifundamentalism
353
The Rhetoric of Fundamentalist Conversion
367
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