Suchergebnisse
Filter
43 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
The Logic of Religious Violence
The presence of religious violence in the Sikh community in India is studied to clarify the connection between religion & violence. The conventional explanations for Sikh violence -- political, economic, & social factors -- are discussed & ultimately rejected. An analysis of the speeches of militant Sikh Jamail Singh Bhindranwale is performed, demonstrating the theme of ultimate struggle against other ethnic groups & the Indian state. The extent of violent imagery in the Christian & Sikh religious traditions is noted; attention is directed to the domesticization of violent imagery in the Sikh religious tradition. It is asserted that religious movements portray their conflicts as ultimate, cosmic struggles to provide religious justification for their violent activities. Factors that have resulted in various religions' use of violence include the claim that cosmic struggles are actual historical events & remain present in the contemporary world & that such violence has cosmic & divine meanings for individuals who perform violent acts. J. W. Parker
The Logic of Religious Violence
The presence of religious violence in the Sikh community in India is studied to clarify the connection between religion & violence. The conventional explanations for Sikh violence -- political, economic, & social factors -- are discussed & ultimately rejected. An analysis of the speeches of militant Sikh Jamail Singh Bhindranwale is performed, demonstrating the theme of ultimate struggle against other ethnic groups & the Indian state. The extent of violent imagery in the Christian & Sikh religious traditions is noted; attention is directed to the domesticization of violent imagery in the Sikh religious tradition. It is asserted that religious movements portray their conflicts as ultimate, cosmic struggles to provide religious justification for their violent activities. Factors that have resulted in various religions' use of violence include the claim that cosmic struggles are actual historical events & remain present in the contemporary world & that such violence has cosmic & divine meanings for individuals who perform violent acts. J. W. Parker
Roots of Religious Violence in India
In: Ich bin nicht gekommen, Frieden zu bringen, sondern das Schwert, S. 229-242
Religious Violence and the “Developmental State” in Rajasthan
In: Perspectives on Violence and Othering in India, S. 175-194
The Culture of Inter-Religious Violence in Anatolian Borderlands in the Late Ottoman Empire
In: Gewaltgemeinschaften, S. 251-274
‘The keys of the kingdom’: religious violence in the Spanish civil war, July–August 1936
In: The Splintering of Spain, S. 68-90
Strategic Violence Among Religious Parties in Pakistan
In: Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Politics
"Strategic Violence Among Religious Parties in Pakistan" published on by Oxford University Press.
“The God of the Martyrs Refuses You”Religious Violence, Political Discourse, and Christian Identity in the Century after Constantine
In: There Is No Crime for Those Who Have ChristReligious Violence in the Christian Roman Empire, S. 68-102
Discourses of Religious Violence and Christian Charity: The Christianization of Syria in Jacob of Sarug’s On the Fall of the Idols
In: Motions of Late Antiquity, S. 129-149
Religious Nationalism and Religious Influence
In: Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Politics
"Religious Nationalism and Religious Influence" published on by Oxford University Press.
Religious Establishment as a Subject of Political Science
In: Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Politics
"Religious Establishment as a Subject of Political Science" published on by Oxford University Press.
A Religious Syntax to Recent Communal Violence in Sri Lanka
In: Buddhist Extremists and Muslim Minorities, S. 194-212
Violence against women, cultural/religious traditions and the international standard of due diligence
In: Due Diligence and Its Application to Protect Women from Violence, S. 223-240
Violence And Opposition Among The Nomads Of Amdo: Expectations Of Leadership And Religious Authority
In: Conflict and Social Order in Tibet and Inner Asia, S. 217-240