Key Concepts

Fundamentalism 2nd Edition

Steve Bruce

Overview

This insightful and provocative new study explores the combination of social strains and religious ideas that have produced such fundamentalist movements as the Islamic revolution in Iran and the new Christian Right in the USA.

Social science has generally focused on the social circumstances that produce extremist movements and regarded their religious ideologies as window-dressing. This study takes the religious elements of fundamentalism seriously. It explains why some religions are more likely than others to produce fundamentalism and why those movements differ in their willingness to use violence to pursue their goals. Rejecting the idea that fundamentalists are suffering from some kind of abnormal psychology, Bruce claims that fundamentalism is a rational response of traditionally religious people to social, political and economic changes that downgrade the role of religion in public life. Despite its importance as a symptom of rapid social change, he concludes that fundamentalism does not pose a serious challenge or sustainable alternative to the secular and liberal democracy of most Western societies. Its force is weakened by its own internal contradictions and blunted by the power of the nation state.

About the Author

Steve Bruce is Professor of Sociology and Head of School of Social Science at the University of Aberdeen.

Table of Contents

  • Acknowledgements
  • Chapter One: The Nature of The Beast
  • Chapter Two: Modernity: The Great Satan
  • Chapter Three: Islamic Fundamentalism
  • Chapter Four: Fundamentalism in the USA
  • Chapter Five: Fundamentalism: Causes and Consequences

Endorsements

“Steve Bruce writes always with great lucidity from a clearly stated point of view. His essay on fundamentalism is no exception. It is well informed and easily accessible and it deserves to be taken seriously even by people who disagree with his view.”

—Martin Riesebrodt, University of Chicago

“Steve Bruce writes with a forthright clarity outlining the essential issues and background of Fundamentalism and Modernity in accessible form. He is indifferent to fashionable views and writes as he finds by reference to evidence. He is an international authority and his book a major addition to the literature.”

— David Martin, Emeritus Professor of Sociology, London School of Economics

“Fundamentalism is informative, vigorously argued and thought-provoking, and it presents a powerful sociological perspective on a controversial phenomenon. Focusing on a comparison between Christianity and Islam, it offers a wealth of details underpinned by subtle but clear theorizing. It is intellectually challenging yet easy to follow.”

— Alan Aldridge, School of Sociology and Social Policy, University of Nottingham

Available titles

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  1. Capitalism, Geoffrey Ingham
  2. Care, Judith Phillips
  3. Concepts of the Self 2nd Edition, Anthony Elliott
  4. Consumption, Alan Aldridge
  5. Culture, Fred Inglis
  6. Democracy, Michael Saward
  7. Development, Anthony Payne and Nicola Phillips
  8. Disability, Colin Barnes and Geof Mercer
  9. Empire, Alejandro Colás
  10. Welfare, Mary Daly
  11. Equality, Stuart White
  12. Ethnicity 2nd Edition, Steve Fenton
  13. Freedom, Katrin Flikschuh
  14. Fundamentalism 2nd Edition, Steve Bruce
  15. Gender, Harriet Bradley
  16. Global Justice, Jon Mandle
  17. Governance, Anne Mette Kjær
  18. Health 2nd Edition, Mildred Blaxter
  19. Human Rights, Michael Freeman
  20. Justice, Harry Brighouse
  21. Representation, Mónica Brito Vieira and David Runciman
  22. Liberalism, Paul Kelly
  23. The Market, Alan Aldridge
  24. Minority Rights, Jennifer Jackson Preece
  25. Nationalism, Anthony D. Smith
  26. Network Society, Darin Barney
  27. The People, Margaret Canovan
  28. Poverty, Ruth Lister
  29. Power, John Scott
  30. Risk, Jakob Arnold
  31. Time, Barbara Adam
  32. Trust, Russell Hardin
  33. Youth, Gill Jones

 

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