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This book is the fruit of several years’ reflection about the revivals
that seem to be occurring in all the major religious traditions and the capacity these revivals have for generating highly charged social and political conflicts in a shrinking globalized world where people of differing and competing faiths are having to live in close proximity with each other. While recognizing that fundamentalism is a fact of life in the 21st century – one that was illustrated in the most spectacular way on 11 September 2001 – this introduction seeks to untangle some of the meanings associated with the term, despite its obvious drawbacks. Fundamentalism originated in the very specific theological context of early 20th-century Protestant America, and its applicability beyond its original matrix is, to put it mildly, problematic. Nevertheless, as I hope to show through numerous examples and parallels, there are compelling family resemblances between militancies or fundamentalisms in different religious traditions. They may not add up to a coherent ideological alternative to the triumph of liberal democracy as described by Francis Fukuyama in his celebrated 1992 essay The End of History and the Last Man. But they are symptomatic, I believe, of the spiritual dystopias and dysfunctional cultural relationships that characterize the world of what some contemporary commentators are choosing to call ‘Late Capitalism’. Many people, students, friends, and colleagues, contributed to this book during its gestation. Students at Dartmouth College, Aberdeen University, the University of California, San Diego, and at the Colorado College helped to focus my thinking with their questions and essays. Academic friends and colleagues, including the late Jim Thrower, the late Albert Hourani, Hans Penner, Gene Garthwaite, Philip Khoury, Arthur Droge, Robert Lee, Charles Tripp, Sami Zubaida, Max Taylor, David Weddle, Ketil Volden, Efraim Inbar, and Fred Halliday, helped stimulate my thinking by inviting me to conferences, lectures, and seminars. I would like to express my thanks to them all, and to Martin Marty and Scott Appleby for inviting me to two meetings of the Fundamentalism Project in Chicago in 1990 and 1993 which first aroused my interest in the subject and gave me the opportunity to meet and talk with scholars from several disciplines and countries. Elfi Pallis kindly supplied some of the information on Jewish fundamentalism that appears in Chapter 6. Sharing Widget |