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Humans have been uttering profane words, and incurring the
consequences, for millennia. But recent events--from the violence
that followed Danish newspaper cartoons depicting the Prophet
Mohammed, in 2006, to the furor over The Innocence of Muslims, in
2012--indicate that blasphemy has reemerged in explosive
transnational form. In an age when electronic media transmit
offense as rapidly as profane images and texts are produced,
blasphemy is bracingly relevant again in our multicultural world.
In this volume, a distinguished cast of international scholars
examines the profound difficulties blasphemy raises for modern
societies. Contributors examine how the sacred is formed and
maintained, how sacrilegious expression is conceived and regulated,
and how the resulting conflicts resist easy adjudication. Their
studies range across art, history, politics, law, literature, and
theology. Because of the global nature of the problem, the volume's
approach is comparative, examining blasphemy across cultural and
geopolitical boundaries.
Three hundred and fifty years ago, Roger Williams launched one of
the world's first great experiments in religious toleration.
Insisting that religion be separated from civil power, he founded
Rhode Island, a colony that welcomed people of many faiths. Though
stark forms of intolerance persisted, Williams' commitments to
faith and liberty of conscience came to define the nation and its
conception of itself. Through crisp essays that show how Americans
demolished old prejudices while inventing new ones, The Lively
Experiment offers a comprehensive account of America's boisterous
history of interreligious relations.
In many ways, religion was the United States' first
prejudice--both an early source of bigotry and the object of the
first sustained efforts to limit its effects. Spanning more than
two centuries across colonial British America and the United
States, "The First Prejudice" offers a groundbreaking exploration
of the early history of persecution and toleration. The twelve
essays in this volume were composed by leading historians with an
eye to the larger significance of religious tolerance and
intolerance. Individual chapters examine the prosecution of
religious crimes, the biblical sources of tolerance and
intolerance, the British imperial context of toleration, the bounds
of Native American spiritual independence, the nuances of
anti-Semitism and anti-Catholicism, the resilience of African
American faiths, and the challenges confronted by skeptics and
freethinkers."The First Prejudice" presents a revealing portrait of
the rhetoric, regulations, and customs that shaped the
relationships between people of different faiths in seventeenth-
and eighteenth-century America. It relates changes in law and
language to the lived experience of religious conflict and
religious cooperation, highlighting the crucial ways in which they
molded U.S. culture and politics. By incorporating a broad range of
groups and religious differences in its accounts of tolerance and
intolerance, "The First Prejudice" opens a significant new vista on
the understanding of America's long experience with diversity.
Three hundred and fifty years ago, Roger Williams launched one of
the world's first great experiments in religious toleration.
Insisting that religion be separated from civil power, he founded
Rhode Island, a colony that welcomed people of many faiths. Though
stark forms of intolerance persisted, Williams' commitments to
faith and liberty of conscience came to define the nation and its
conception of itself. Through crisp essays that show how Americans
demolished old prejudices while inventing new ones, The Lively
Experiment offers a comprehensive account of America's boisterous
history of interreligious relations.
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