ABSTRACT

This book re-examines the relationship between religion and nationalism in a contemporary Asian context, with a focus on East, South and South East Asia.

Addressing empirical, analytical, and normative questions, it analyses selected case studies from across Asia, including China, India, Iraq, Japan, Pakistan, the Philippines and Sri Lanka and compares the differences and commonalities between the diverse configurations of nationalism and religion across the continent. It then goes on to explain reasons for the regional religious resurgence and asks, is the nation-state model, aligned with secularism, suitable for the region? Exploring the two interrelated issues of legacies and possibilities, this book also examines the relationship between nationalism and modernity, identifying possible and desirable trajectories which go beyond existing configurations of nationalism and religion.

Bringing together a stellar line up of contributors in the field, Religion and Nationalism in Asia will be a valuable resource for students and scholars of Asian religion and politics as well as sociology, ethnicity, nationalism and comparative politics.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

Legacies and possibilities

chapter 2|15 pages

Midnight’s children

Religion and nationalism in South Asia 1

chapter 5|15 pages

The irony of secular nation-building in Japanese modernity

Inoue Kowashi and Fukuzawa Yukichi

chapter 6|14 pages

Buddhism, cosmology, and Greater East Asian Co-prosperity Sphere

Multiculturalism and nationalism in the pre-war period Japan

chapter 7|16 pages

Political modernity in East Asia

Religion, nationalism and subversion of imperialism

chapter 8|15 pages

Religious nationalism with non-domination

Ahn Changho’s cosmopolitan patriotism

chapter 9|15 pages

The structural problem of religious freedom in China

Toward a Confucian-Christian synthesis

chapter 11|18 pages

Post-Chinese reconnections through religion

Buddhism, Christianity, and Confucianism

chapter |13 pages

Conclusion