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From Religious Emotions to Affects. Historical and Theoretical Reflections on Injury to Feeling, Self and Religion

Culture and Religion (Cover)

Culture and Religion (Cover)

Ural, Nur Yasemin; Berg, Anna Lea – 2019

Images of angry Muslims have become a common sight in repeated controversies problematising the compatibility of Islam and freedom of speech. To explain such outrage, it is often put forward that Muslims reacted to the disrespect and violation of their ‘religious feelings’. In this paper, we challenge the trope of hurt religious feelings in the explanation of unrest. Referring to the writings of Schleiermacher, James and Taylor, the discussion traces how religion and feeling have become inextricably intertwined, located within the individual self and institutionalised as a dominant interpretation of religion. We introduce affect as a conceptual alternative to such understandings, which allows us to analyse the emphasis on Muslim emotionality as a relationship between Muslim and secular bodies, hence no longer reduced to the interiority of Muslim subjects. We will illustrate the potential of an affect-based approach discussing Muslim feelings’ vital role in the construction of European democracies.

Titel
From Religious Emotions to Affects
Verfasser
Ural, Nur Yasemin; Berg, Anna Lea
Datum
2019
Kennung
DOI: 10.1080/14755610.2019.1603168
Erschienen in
Culture and Religion 20(2)
Sprache
eng
Art
Text
Größe oder Länge
pp. 207–223