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Postsecularist discourse in an ‘age of transition’

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2013

Abstract

The last twenty years have seen the emergence of an intriguing postsecular discourse which seeks to remedy the limitations of the secular interpretation of politics. The resurgence of religion in the public sphere, the vociferous articulation of fundamentalist worldviews, and the intensification of conflict within and between religious traditions as well as between religious and secularist dispositions are evidence enough of the need to rethink standard secularist formulations. However, this article argues that postsecularity as a concept raises as many questions as it answers. While it rightly draws our attention to the profound discontinuities of our age, post-secularist thought is too preoccupied with certain specificities of contemporary Western discourse and practice to be able to make sense of the wider challenge-response dynamic that is integral to the current period of transition. This article examines the lacunae of post-secularity and avenues for further development of its insights by reference to four closely interlinked features of a rapidly transforming world order: (a) the transnational character of much religious discourse and practice; (b) the decline of the West and the corresponding shift in the economic and geopolitical centre of gravity; (c) the complex relationship between the resurgence of religion and the wider phenomenon of identity politics; and (d) the emerging dialectic between conflictual and dialogical approaches to cultural and geopolitical pluralism.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © British International Studies Association 2012

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References

1 The multiple, at times competing ideas of secularity in the ‘postmodern’ context, are usefully reviewed in Prosman, Hank-Jan, The Postmodern Condition and the Meaning of Secularity (Utrecht: Ars Disputandi, 2011), pp. 1418, available at: {http://adss.library.uu.nl/index.html}Google Scholar.

2 Even those who seek to integrate religion more effectively into the study of International Relations, are more comfortable doing so within confines of IR theorising than the larger horizons offered in postsecular writings. See, for example, Sheikh, Mona Kanwal, ‘How Does Religion Matter? Pathways to religion in International relations’, Review of International Studies, 38:2 (April 2012), pp. 365–92CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

3 The diverse meanings attributed to the term ‘postsecular’ are emphatically described though not always as clearly delineated in Beckford, James A., ‘SSSR Presidential Address – Public Religions and the Postsecular: Critical Reflections’, Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 51:1 (March 2012), pp. 119CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

4 Highly instructive in this context is the return of religion to academic discourse in American higher education. The re-emergence of religion in diverse disciplines – from art and music to English, history, philosophy, politics, sociology, social work and medicine, to name a few – has been accompanied by the remarkable growth of religious professional associations, centres, institutes, and philanthropic foundations. See John Schmalzbauer and Kathleen Mahoney, ‘Religion and Knowledge in the Postsecular Academy’, Social Science Research Council Working Papers (February 2008).

5 See Berger, Peter's analysis of this dichotomy in ‘The Desecularization of the World: A Global Overview’, in Berger, Peter L. (ed.), The Desecularization of the World: Resurgent Religion and World Politics (Grand Rapids, Mich: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing, 1999), pp. 1011Google Scholar.

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7 The trend has been noted by numerous scholars over a span of more than twenty years. One of the earlier expositions was offered by Kepel, Gilles, La Revanche de Dieu: Chrétiens, Juifs et Musulmans à la Reconquête du Monde (2nd edn, Paris: Seuil, 2003 [orig. pub. 1993])Google Scholar. See also Thomas, Scott M., The Global Resurgence of Religion and the Transformation of International Relations: The Struggle for the Soul of the Twenty-First Century (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2005)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Westerlund, David (ed.), Questioning the Secular State: the Worldwide Resurgence of Religion in Politics (London: S. Hurst & Co., 2002)Google Scholar.

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10 This is not a novel observation. Hurd's The Politics of Secularism is a telling demonstration of this defect and one of the few effective attempts in the international relations literature to remedy it. See also Robert Keohane, ‘The Globalization of Informal Violence, Theories of World Politics, and the “Liberalism of Fear”’, available at: {http://essays.ssrc.org/sept11/essays/keohane2.htm} accessed 15 August 2011. The strategic and diplomatic communities have not been immune to this apparent failure to grasp the nature and implications of religion's renewed presence on the international stage; see Brooks, David, ‘Kicking the Secularist Habit’, Atlantic Monthly, 291:2 (2003), pp. 26–8Google Scholar.

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12 The most easily recognisable interpretation of the secular, from a religious vantage point, is the one which centres on the distinction between two spheres: the religious and the temporal, the sacred and the profane. Here secularism is perceived as a cultural-political project committed to marginalising the religious or sacred by relegating its expression to a purely private sphere. Aleksandr Kyrlezhev offers a sharper variation on this theme, arguing that secularisation rejects the very duality of the religious and profane, and seeks instead to establish the secular as a fully autonomous, self-sufficient and all encompassing sphere, in which religion is rendered ‘superfluous’ or ‘non-essential’. Religious theory and practice are thereby deprived of the capacity to relate to, let alone influence, the non-religious. Secularisation, understood as the ‘desacralisation of politics’, sees the reversal of roles we associate with the pre-modern Christian world. Secularisation thus becomes a cultural project which determines the character and function of religion in society, while it itself acquires sacral characteristics. See Kyrlezhev, Aleksandr, ‘The Postsecular Age: Religion and Culture Today’, Religion, State and Society, 36:1 (2008), pp. 2131CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

13 Taylor, Charles, A Secular Age (Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2007), p. 506Google Scholar.

14 Ibid,, p. 507.

15 Ibid,, p. 512.

16 Believers in this form of Christianity, who are said to receive the gifts of the Holy Spirit and have ecstatic experiences (for example, speaking in tongues, healing, prophesying), are now estimated to number well in excess of 500 million. Pentecostalism has been described as ‘one of the great success stories of the current era of cultural globalisation’. See Robbins, Joel, ‘The Globalization of Pentecostal and Charismatic Christianity’, Annual Review of Anthropology, 33 (2004), pp. 17143CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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18 Alessandro Ferrara attaches the label political secularism to the first meaning and social secularism to the second, arguing that the key to the secularisation thesis is the expectation that political secularism would in due course give way to social secularism. Ferrara, Alessandro, ‘The Separation of Religion and Politics in a Post-Secular Society’, Philosophy and Social Criticism, 35:1–2 (2009), pp. 7791CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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20 Taylor, A Secular Age, p. 3.

21 Ibid., p. 531, emphasis added.

22 Ibid., pp. 532, 714.

23 Taylor, A Secular Age, p. 571.

24 Calhoun, ‘Rethinking Secularism’, p. 457.

25 Taylor, A Secular Age, p. 510.

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27 Ibid.

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34 Habermas, Rusconi suggests, sets three conditions for religion to be able to participate in the democratic process: it must renounce ‘the monopoly of truth’, accept ‘the authority of science’, and respect ‘the public primacy of lay/secular law’. See Gian Enrico Rusconi, ‘Three-Way (German) Dialogue on Post-Secularism’, Reset Dialogues on Civilizations (18 September 2007), available at: {http://www.resetdoc.org/story/00000000529} accessed 26 August 2011.

35 Barbato and Kratochwil refer to two interpretations of Habermas – one strong and the other weak – to highlight the tensions in the recent Habermasian attempt to grapple with ‘the semantic potential of religious language for public discourses’. Barbato, Mariano and Kratochwil, Friedrich, ‘Towards a Postsecular Order?’, European Political Science Review, 1:3 (2009), p. 336CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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37 Another important contributor has been William Connolly who has advocated a conception of pluralism premised on the inseparability of politics and metaphysics. As part of his ‘politics of becoming’ he envisages a plural network of constituencies in which each strives for ‘generosity’ towards others and a form of public engagement which respects a variety of religious and secular beliefs: see Connolly, W. E., Why I am not a Secularist (Minneapolis MN: University of Minnesota Press, 1999), p. 39Google Scholar. It is also worth noting in this context that a number of French philosophers and cultural theorists, including Michel Foucault, Jacques Derrida, Emmanuel Levinas, Alain Badiou, Jean-Luc Nancy, Luce Irigaray, and Julia Kristeva, have played a key role in evaluating ‘the return of religion’ to recent Western thought. One of the most important outcomes of their collective contribution has been to reopen the debate on the role and nature of religion in the political domain, and its relationship to the secular. For a useful review of this contribution see Barker, Victoria, ‘“After the Death of God”: Postsecularity?’, Journal of Religious History, 33:1 (2009), pp. 8295CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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45 Marilyn Booth, Review of Talal Asad's Formations of the Secular: Christianity, Islam and Modernity, Bryn Mawr Review of Comparative Literature, 4(2) (2004), available at: {http://www.brynmawr.edu/bmrcl/Summer2004/Asad.html} accessed 20 August 2011.

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71 Jim Falk and I have argued that a shift of epochal proportions may be underway, and that the post-1945 period is perhaps best understood as a period of transition in which the ‘simultaneously unifying and polarising impact of financial, commercial, information, demographic and ecological flows’ is producing a geopolitical, geoeconomic and geocultural environment that is radically different from the one we normally associate with the Modern epoch. See Camilleri and Falk, Worlds in Transition, pp. 146–9.

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78 Habermas, ‘A “Post-Secular” Society – What Does it Mean?’ (see fn. 53).

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