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Part 1: Why do we Hate? Chapter 1: Race, Religion, Rhetoric: Theories of Prejudice and Othering Chapter 2: The Hatred unto Death: When Prejudice Becomes Killing and Genocide Special Focus: What is Religious Hatred? Part 2: Bridges from the Past Chapter 3: The Oldest Prejudice? Christian Anti-Semitism from the Gospels to Luther Chapter 4: Kafir and Turks: Christians and Muslims through History Chapter 5: Enlightenment, Citizenship, and Race: The Modern Hatred of Jews, Muslims and People of Colour Special Focus: Why did the Holocaust happen? Part 3: Contemporary Western Hatreds Chapter 6: The West’s Eternal Jewish Question? Politics, Anti-Semitism, and Holocaust Denial Chapter 7: “Why do they hate us?” and Why do we hate them? Contemporary Western Islamophobias Special Focus: Are Anti-Semitism and Islamophobia Connected? Part 4: Prejudice Beyond the West Chapter 8: From People of the Book to Enemies of Islam: Islamic Anti-Semitism and Palestine-Israel Chapter 9: Killing for the Buddha: Islamophobia in the Buddhist World Chapter 10: Hindus and the Fatherland: Hindutva as Hatred Special Focus: Can we Regulate Against Religious Hatred? Epilogue: The Good News: Dialogue, Civil Rights, and Peacebuilding Bibliography Index
Asks what drives religious hatred, focusing on Islamophobia and antisemitism, drawing on global examples in diverse political and cultural contexts.
Paul Hedges is Associate Professor of Interreligious Studies at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies at Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. He has produced over a dozen books and sixty papers in such areas as interreligious relations, theory and method in the study of religion, and the role of religion in contemporary society. His books include Contemporary Christian-Muslim Encounters (Bloomsbury, 2015).
Hedges has written a remarkable book, which deserves to be widely
read by students of religion, as well as by those who work in
community relations. It is accessible and clearly written ... work
of scholarship from an expert in interreligious relations.
*Reviews in Religion and Theology*
Paul Hedges offers a critical and multidisciplinary contribution to
the perennial questions regarding the whence, whither, wherefore,
and whereby of religious hatred ... Significantly, he connects
antisemitism and Islamophobia together as forms of bias and
prejudice (partially explainable through social identity theory).
For this, and more, the book is highly commendable ... Indeed, I’ll
be employing it in my own classes precisely because of how it opens
us up to debate and critical exploration.
*Journal of Interreligious Studies*
Religious Hatred is an ambitious book ... No one volume attempting
to weave together so much history in so many places can do
everything, but Hedges is able to do quite a lot to enter into and
further a conversation that, I hope, will remain at the forefront.
With Islamophobia and antisemitism on the rise, work like this is
crucial.
*Journal of the American Academy of Religion*
The book is written in straightforward and jargon-free language
that makes it suitable for a course book but also relevant for
senior scholars and the general public. It is carefully worded with
elegant alliterative sentences, inviting the reader to stop and
reflect.
*TEMENOS: Nordic Journal of Comparative Religion*
I believe the book to be of great worth ... I have learned a lot
from it, and will undoubtedly return to it ... Overall, the book
offers rich reward for taking the time to read it and think about
it.
*Criminal Law and Criminal Justice Books*
Hedges’ book is an excellent resource for educators and scholars
hoping to have more nuanced and balanced discussions on the
realities of Islamophobia and antisemitism. His book equips his
readers with the resources they need not only to conceptually
understand what prejudice, hatred and violence are as human
phenomena, but also to respond to these challenges with deeper
historical awareness and sensitivity.
*Current Dialogue*
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