ABSTRACT

Although emerging scholarship in the social sciences suggests that religion can be a potential catalyst of cosmopolitanism and global citizenship, few attempts have been made to bring to the fore new theoretical positions and empirical analyses of how cosmopolitanism -- as a philosophical notion, a practice and identity outlook -- can also shape and inform concrete religious affiliations. Key questions concerning the significance of cosmopolitan ideas and practices – in relation to particular religious experiences and discourses -- remain to be explored, both theoretically and empirically.

This book takes as its starting point the emergence of cosmopolitanism -- as a major interdisciplinary field -- as a springboard for generating a productive dialogue among scholars working within a variety of intellectual disciplines and methodological traditions. The chapter contributions offer a serious attempt to critically engage both the limitations and possibilities of cosmopolitanism as an analytical and critical tool to understand a changing religious landscape in a globalizing world, namely, the so-called ‘new religious diversity’, religious conflict, and issues of migration, multiculturalism and transnationalism vis-à-vis the public exercise of religion. The contributors’ work is situated in a range of world sites in Africa, India, North America, Latin America, and Europe.

This work will be of great interest to students and scholars of globalization, religion and politics, and the sociology of religion.

 

part |86 pages

Contexts

chapter |17 pages

The discourse and practice of a Buddhist cosmopolitanism

Transnational migrants and Tzu Chi Movement

chapter |16 pages

The controversy over minarets in Switzerland

Cosmopolitanism and religious symbols in the public sphere

chapter |20 pages

Finding a path to a common future

Religion and cosmopolitanism in the context of Bosnia-Herzegovina

chapter |14 pages

The cosmopolitan outlook and missionary encounters

Young Catholic missionaries in Africa

part |115 pages

Debates

chapter |21 pages

Mediating cosmopolitanism

Contests, ambiguities, critiques and questions

chapter |19 pages

Religion and deep multiculturalism

Toward a cosmopolitical ethics of engagement 1

chapter |14 pages

Christian and cosmopolitan ethics

Friends or foes?

chapter |21 pages

Moving beyond the rhetoric

Meeting the challenges of cosmopolitanism, faith and the public sphere