For decades India has been intermittently tormented by brutal
outbursts of religious violence, thrusting thousands of ordinary
Hindus and Muslims into bloody conflict. In this provocative work,
psychoanalyst Sudhir Kakar exposes the psychological roots of
Hindu-Muslim violence and examines with grace and intensity the
subjective experience of religious hatred in his native land. With
honesty, insight, and unsparing self-reflection, Kakar confronts the
profoundly enigmatic relations that link individual egos to cultural
moralities and religious violence. His innovative psychological
approach offers a framework for understanding the kind of
ethnic-religious conflict that has so vexed social scientists in India
and throughout the world. Through riveting case studies, Kakar
explores cultural stereotypes, religious antagonisms, ethnocentric
histories, and episodic violence to trace the development of both
Hindu and Muslim psyches. He argues that in early childhood the social
identity of every Indian is grounded in traditional religious
identifications and communalism. Together these bring about deep-set
psychological anxieties and animosities toward the other. For Hindus
and Muslims alike, violence becomes morally acceptable when communally
and religiously sanctioned. As the changing pressures of modernization
and secularism in a multicultural society grate at this entrenched
communalism, and as each group vies for power, ethnic-religious
conflicts ignite. The Colors of Violence speaks with eloquence and
urgency to anyone concerned with the postmodern clash of religious and
cultural identities.
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Cultural Identities, Religion, and Conflict
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780226249285
Publisert
2022
Utgiver
University of Chicago Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter