Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 250
Trim: 6¼ x 9⅜
978-1-4422-7683-3 • Hardback • January 2017 • $123.00 • (£95.00)
978-1-4422-7684-0 • Paperback • January 2017 • $50.00 • (£38.00)
978-1-4422-7685-7 • eBook • January 2017 • $47.50 • (£37.00)
Charles Selengut is professor of sociology at County College of Morris and former professor of religion at Drew University. He is the author of several books, including Our Promised Land: Faith and Militant Zionism in Israeli Settlements.
Introduction: The Study of Religion and Violence
Chapter 1: Fighting for God: Scriptural Obligations and Holy Wars
Chapter 2: Psychological Perspectives
Chapter 3: Apocalyptic Violence
Chapter 4: Civilizational Clashes, Culture Wars, and Religious Violence
Chapter 5: Religious Suffering, Martyrdom, and Sexual Violence
Conclusion: Toward a Holistic Approach to Religious Violence
In this newly revised and expanded edition of a book first published 14 years ago, Selengut continues and expands the increasingly needed conversation on religion and violence. Praise for this new edition by Mark Juergensmeyer, arguably the expert on the subject, is testimony to its worth. In the introduction, Selengut sets the scene by noting the duality of good and evil in religious traditions, and in the book's five chapters he looks at the subject through the lenses of scripture, psychology, apocalypse, civilization, and suffering. The first chapter highlights the importance of acknowledging religious realities and builds up to the second and strongest chapter, which emphasizes the central role psychology plays in religious violence. The chapter on apocalypticism looks at exaggerated but repressed religious sentiments and leads to a chapter on the grey area between religion and politics. The last chapter…delves into sexual violence and gives a nod to the gendered component of violence in religion. Selengut provides a holistic, up-to-date examination of religion and violence, a deadly combination.
Summing Up: Recommended. Lower- and upper-division undergraduates; general readers.
— Choice Reviews
In an effort to reflect recent events, Sacred Fury has been updated with approximately fifteen pages of new material (e.g., the rise of ISIS, the activities of homegrown terrorists, violence against Rohingya Muslims)…. There is no question that Selengut’s framework is far-reaching and disciplinarily capacious…. [T]he text is a useful taxonomy of research on the topic. It fruitfully highlights the multi-dimensional nature of the relationship between religion and violence, and compels the reader to consider the reality that a single action the decision to engage in an act of violence for a religious reason—should be considered through a variety of lenses. The most recent edition also deserves credit for correcting a problematic emphasis on Judaism, Christianity, and Islam that was evident in previous versions. The newest edition, by contrast, reflects not only a linguistic shift but also a shift in content: as one example, the first page now explicitly mentions Hinduism and Buddhism and new material on Hindu/Buddhist violence has been added to the first chapter…. The book remains important and worthwhile because it offers one of only a few interdisciplinary analyses of the relationship between religion and violence.
— Reading Religion
In this revised and expanded edition of Sacred Fury, Selengut surveys the rise of religious violence in world affairs, including lone wolf terrorism in Europe and the United States, the emergence of ISIS in the Middle East, and new forms of Buddhist violence in Southeast Asia. He brings psychological perspectives to bear in helping us understand how marginalized people, adopting religious images of divine conquest, engage in acts of public violence out of a sense of spiritual mission. This will be a helpful volume both for classroom use and public discussion. It helps us think anew about the causes of religious violence and how we should appropriately respond.
— Mark Juergensmeyer, professor emeritus of global studies and sociology, University of California, Santa Barbara
Charles Selengut's updated and revised Sacred Fury continues to be an invaluable resource to anyone interested in the complexities of religiously motivated violence. Now more than ever, it is a must-read for students, academics, and the general public. Selengut's uniquely personal approach adds a needed psychological dimension to our understanding of religious violence and religiously motivated terrorism.
— Jeffrey S. Kaplan, (University of Wisconsin Oshkosh)
An interdisciplinary approach to the connections between religion and violence around the globe
Draws on both historic and contemporary examples
New material on the rise and theology of ISIS and how it differs from al-Quaeda
New information on the Iraq war and its aftermath
New discussions on violence in Hinduism and Buddhism
New analysis of psychological marginality, terrorism, and the “lone wolf” phenomenon