Why Politics Can't Be Freed From ReligionISBN: 978-1-4051-7649-1
Hardcover
216 pages
March 2010, Wiley-Blackwell
Other Available Formats: Paperback
|
“Overall the book is an excellent
contribution.” (Political Studies Review, 1
January 2013)
“But as a powerful myth-buster of some of the great fallacies
about religion and politics, or even as a primer in the study of
religion for undergraduates, it works very well and would serve to
provoke lively debate.” (Modern Believing, 1
April 2012)
"The book is written in an accessible and engaging style, and readers who are new to the field of religion and politics will find it readable and helpful". (Religion, September 2010)
"Going beyond the religion-is-good and the religion-is-bad clichés, while also distancing himself from fashionable academic eliminationists, Ivan Strenski examines the connections among religion, power and politics. Is religion merely ‘used’ by fanatics, as if it were an inert hammer that can be picked up or dropped at will? Is it to be equated with belief? Or with power, à la Foucault? Or is it, rather, inseparable from authority? Most readers are likely to have their presuppositions shaken by Strenski’s Manifesto."—Gustavo Benavides, Villanova University