Hijacked
A Critical Treatment of the Public Rhetoric of Good and Bad Religion
Leslie Dorrough Smith [+–]
Avila University
Steffen Führding [+–]
Leibniz University Hannover
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Adrian Hermann [+–]
University of Bonn
Public inquiry into religion is guided by unspoken value judgments which are the products of rarely-discussed political interests. Intentionally or not, much of our public discourse on religion involves a subtle but powerful distinction between “good” and “bad” religion. The implications of these labeling practices are far-reaching, for these judgments manifest in terms such as “fundamentalist,” “radical,” and “extremist,” words that are often the gauge by which governments worldwide determine everything from the parameters of religious freedom, to what constitutes an act of terrorism, to whether certain groups receive legal protections. Conversely, it is surprising to see how groups that may otherwise better typify the extremist profile remain unscathed by punitive governmental or social measures because of their pre-existing social popularity or perceived normalcy.
This volume discusses the nature of this issue and its practical ramifications, demonstrating how scholars can analytically critique “good/bad religion” rhetoric as it appears in scholarship today. The book is organized around four different social institutions through which these value judgments have been established and deployed – within politics, the media, the university, and the classroom. The four sections each work from a central chapter that highlights a case study or example of the “good/bad” distinction at work. The responses that follow extrapolate from this chapter to provide an analysis on how such rhetoric operates in that particular social realm.
Series: NAASR Working Papers
Table of Contents
Preface
Part I: The Public Rhetoric of Good and Bad Religion
Part II: Politics
Matt Sheedy holds a Ph.D. in the study of religion and is a visiting professor of North American Studies at the University of Bonn, Germany. His research interests include critical social theory, theories of secularism and atheism, as well as representations of Christianity, Islam, and Native American traditions in popular and political culture. He is the author of Owning the Secular: Religious Symbols, Culture Wars, Western Fragility (Routledge, 2021).
Part III: Media
Part IV: University
Part V: Classroom
End Matter