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Mass Religious Ritual and Intergroup Tolerance: The Muslim Pilgrims' Paradox (Cambridge Studies in Social Theory, Religion and Politics)

Mass Religious Ritual and Intergroup Tolerance: The Muslim Pilgrims' Paradox (Cambridge Studies in Social Theory, Religion and Politics)

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Mikhail A. Alexseev, Sufian N. Zhemukhov
Cambridge University Press, 7/14/2017
EAN 9781107191853, ISBN10: 1107191858

Hardcover, 240 pages, 23.9 x 16.4 x 2 cm
Language: English

Under what conditions does in-group pride facilitate out-group tolerance? What are the causal linkages between intergroup tolerance and socialization in religious rituals? This book examines how Muslims from Russia's North Caucuses returned from the Hajj pilgrimage to Mecca both more devout as Muslims and more tolerant of out-groups. Drawing on prominent theories of identity and social capital, the authors resolve seeming contradictions between the two literatures by showing the effects of religious rituals that highlight within-group diversity at the same time that they affirm the group's common identity. This theory is then applied to explain why social integration of Muslim immigrants has been more successful in the USA than in Europe and how the largest Hispanic association in the US defied the clash of civilizations theory by promoting immigrants' integration into America's social mainstream. The book offers insights into Islam's role in society and politics and the interrelationships between religious faith, immigration and ethnic identity, and tolerance that will be relevant to both scholars and practitioners.

Introduction
Part I. The Pilgrims' Paradox
1. Russia's North Caucasus
the State, the Hajj, and the revival of the sacred
2. The paths of the paradox
from passion to tolerance
3. The Hajj as social identity and social capital
Part II. The Hajj Model of Social Tolerance
4. Repositioning or the axis mundi effect
5. Recategorization
6. Repersonalization
Part III. Beyond the Hajj
7. Islam's social spaces
Europe vs the United States
8. The la raza axis
Hispanic integration in North America
9. Conclusion.