ABSTRACT

 Antagonistic Tolerance examines patterns of coexistence and conflict amongst members of different religious communities, using multidisciplinary research to analyze groups who have peacefully intermingled for generations, and who may have developed aspects of syncretism in their religious practices, and yet have turned violently on each other.  Such communities define themselves as separate peoples, with different and often competing interests, yet their interaction is usually peaceable provided the dominance of one group is clear. The key indicator of dominance is control over central religious sites, which may be tacitly shared for long periods, but later contested and even converted as dominance changes. By focusing on these shared and contested sites, this volume allows for a wider understanding of relations between these communities.

Using a range of ethnographic, historical and archaeological data from the Balkans, India, Mexico, Peru, Portugal and Turkey, Antagonistic Tolerance develops a comparative model of the competitive sharing and transformation of religious sites. These studies are not considered as isolated cases, but are instead woven into a unified analytical framework which explains how long-term peaceful interactions between religious communities can turn conflictual and even result in ethnic cleansing.

chapter 1|24 pages

Introduction

Competitive sharing of religious sites in Europe, the Middle East, South Asia and Latin America

chapter 2|25 pages

Religioscape

Concept, indicators and scales of competitive sharing through time

chapter 3|19 pages

Seeing things hidden in plain sight

Overcoming the self-limiting features of scholarly disciplines and area studies literatures

chapter 5|30 pages

Techniques of domination

Conquest and destruction, displacement or transformation of sacred sites

chapter 6|20 pages

God capture and antagonistic inclusion

chapter 7|23 pages

Religio-, secular- and archaeoscapes