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The Religious and the Political
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Table of Contents

Introduction; Part I. The Religious and the Political: 1. Fear of diversity: the origin of politics; 2. Charisma and church-state relations; 3. City, nation and globe: the rise of the church and the citizen; Part II. State Management of Religion: 4. Religion and kingship: liturgies and royal rituals; 5. Religion and reproduction: marriage and family; 6. Conversion and the state; 7. Religion, state and legitimacy: three dimensions of authority; Part III. Comparative and Historical Studies: 8. Buddhism and the political: the sangha and the state; 9. Confucianism as state ideology: China; 10. Religion, state and Japanese exceptionalism: nihonjinron; 11. State and Turkish secularism: the case of Diyanet (with Berna Zengin Arslan); Part IV. Conclusion: 12. Popular religion and popular democracy; 13. The state and freedom of religion.

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Explores the relationship between religion and politics through a number of key issues including marriage, law, conversion and veiling.

About the Author

Bryan S. Turner is the Presidential Professor of Sociology and the Director of the Committee on Religion at the Graduate Center, the City University of New York, and the Director of the Center for Religion and Society at the University of Western Sydney. He is the author of Religion and Modern Society (Cambridge University Press, 2011) and the editor of The Cambridge Dictionary of Sociology (Cambridge University Press, 2006).

Reviews

'The Religious and the Political challenges conventional assumptions about secular modernity by demonstrating that state formations are deeply enmeshed with the religious on myriad fronts - from gender and family to revelation and charisma, agency and conversion, citizenship, power and violence, and colonialism. Turner's global comparative sociology of this 'tragic tension' will help informed scholars and a wider readership alike grapple with the key antinomies of liberal modernity in ways that point to a path forward for both souls and states.' John R. Hall, Professor of Sociology, University of California, Davis

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