Lexington Books
Pages: 334
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-0-7391-0760-7 • Hardback • December 2003 • $136.00 • (£105.00)
Santosh C. Saha is Professor of History at Mount Union College in Ohio.
Part 1 Approaches to Fundamentalisms
Chapter 2 Religious Fundamentalism and its "other:" Snapshot View from the Global Information Order
Chapter 3 Some Priority Variables in the Study of Comparative Religious Politics
Chapter 4 Fundamentalist Ideology, Institutions, and the State: A Formal Analysis
Chapter 5 Religions Between Universal and Particular: Eastern Europe After 1989
Part 6 Regional Fundamentalisms
Chapter 7 Phases of Political Islam
Chapter 8 Contesting Historiographies in South Asia: The Islamization of Pakistani Social Studies Textbooks
Chapter 9 Hindu Revivalist Cultural Policies and Programs in India: A Critique
Chapter 10 Perceiving Islam: The Cause and Consequences of Islamophobia in Western Media
Chapter 11 Democracy v. Fundamentalism: Religious Politics of the Bharatiya Janata Party in India
Chapter 12 Ethnicity and Religion in Israeli Politics: Emergence of the Shas Party
Santosh Saha's scholarly book provides a cogent and a brilliant in-depth analysis of socio-political issues in the context of religious fundamentalism from fresh angles. It's a must reading for general and well-informed readership.
— B. M. Jain, University of Rajasthan, India
This volume will make the reader sit up and pay attention. It gives due weight to the world-changing potential of religious fundamentalism, as a force as powerful as Marxism was in the twentieth-century. It pays scholarly regard to the diversity of fundamentalism in different religious and regional settings. And it delves into a matter calling out for our attention: the effect of fundamentalism on education. The context for its discussions is the world since September 11, 2001. The blend of scholarship and political urgency renders this volume both a valuable resource and a call to responsible action.
— Revd Dr. Harriet A. Harris, Wadham College, Oxford
The hatred and darkness being spread in the name of religious fundamentalism certainly needs to be studied and exposed. This well-written, well-organized, well-argued, and well-referenced work is a giant step in the right direction.
— Robert Lawless, Wichita State University
The book, carefully written by a galaxy of authors with first-hand experience, is well-documented and comprehensive in its goal.
— Missiology: An International Review
This collection represents a pluralist approach to religious fundamentalism. No definitional order is imposed and a variety of theories are expounded. All the author are engaged analytically in the attempt to identify and to comprehend the many faces of fundamentalist ideology in our contemporary world. There are ten chapters by authors representing a broad range of academic disciplines.
— International Third World Studies Journal and Review