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The Limits of Contemporary Sociology: Secularisation, Sacralisation and the Resurgence of Religion in the Public Realm. John Eade CRONEM/Surrey and Roehampton Universities. No Universal Model?. European or American exceptionalism No universal model based on a regional experience
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The Limits of Contemporary Sociology: Secularisation, Sacralisation and the Resurgence of Religion in the Public Realm John Eade CRONEM/Surrey and Roehampton Universities
No Universal Model? • European or American exceptionalism • No universal model based on a regional experience • Different secularising processes reflecting historical particularities and global/local interactions
England and Secularism: Between the European and American Poles? • Europe: religion controlled by the state so that newcomers are obliged to fit within this structure (Muslim representation in France and Belgium, the Dutch and German ‘pillar’ system
England and Secularism: Between the European and American Poles? • In the USA the state’s permissive tradition encourages religious pluralism and does not control or centralise religious representation • In England the established Church holds a privileged position but other Christian groups and non-Christian newcomers enjoy a relatively high degree of freedom from state control
English Exceptionalism: Controlling Non-Christian Groupsin Public Space • Before The Satanic Verses saga the state followed the English mixed economy of preserving the privileged position of the Church of England and allowing non-Christian groups considerable freedom • This was accompanied by the resurgence of religious consciousness among minority groups and their increasing visibility
The 1990s onwards: Moving towards the European Model? • Global and local events such as the first Gulf war, ‘9/11’, ‘7/7’ and engagements in Iraq and Afghanistan • Effect has been to increase state surveillance, encouragement of assimilation, hierarchical organisation, engagement with a secular majority and closing the gap with Europe
Resistance to StateSecularising Pressure: Sacralising Public Space • The momentum of sacralising local space and asserting a public presence by non-Christian groups has not slowed • Nor have the attempts by their religious leaders to develop a moral order free from western secular ‘corruption’ diminished
From Private to Public Space: The Sacralisation of Mainstream Urban Space • 1960s and 1970s use of private accommodation by non-Christians • 1980s onwards – taking over mainstream public secular and religious buildings • Purifying religion from syncretic cultural traditions • Sustaining or restoring moral order in a corrupt secular West
Four Case Studies from Two Cronem Projects: Three Different Mosques in London’s East End • Transnational migration and minority ethnic groups in London’s dark, exotic east • Doing dawah among Muslim settlers: the Markazi mosque on Christian Street • Going public: making a grand statement for the Olympics
Tamil Hindus in London ‘East End’ • Migrant workers, refugees and asylum seekers from Sri Lanka • Tamil settlers from India • Moving from a pub to a temple • Creating moral order: the circulation of priestly experts
Kimbanguist Christiansin N. London • French-speaking refugees and asylum seekers from the DRC • Sacralising space: external anonymity and internal elaboration • Sacred centres and peripheries: London, Brussels, Paris and the Congolese temple
The Polish Catholic Mission • Old Poles and new Poles • Preserving the faith: pilgrimage to a Marian shrine in the Kent countryside • Sustaining moral order in a decadent secular west: transnational migrants and a historic mission