Modernity, secularism and Islam: The case of Turkey

EF Keyman - Theory, culture & society, 2007 - journals.sagepub.com
Theory, culture & society, 2007journals.sagepub.com
The resurgence of religious movements all over the world, their varying claims to identity
and politics (from public deliberations to fundamentalism), and their success in generating
system-transforming effects in both national and world politics have indicated clearly that
there is a need to uncover the invisible interconnections between religion and politics.
Moreover, the way in which religion has been striking back has taken different forms. From
religious and terrorist fundamentalism to multiculturalism, from communitarian claims to the …
The resurgence of religious movements all over the world, their varying claims to identity and politics (from public deliberations to fundamentalism), and their success in generating system-transforming effects in both national and world politics have indicated clearly that there is a need to uncover the invisible interconnections between religion and politics. Moreover, the way in which religion has been striking back has taken different forms. From religious and terrorist fundamentalism to multiculturalism, from communitarian claims to the religious state to religion-based civil societal calls for pluralism and freedom, it is possible to see different articulations of the resurgence of religion in the world in which we live. In this context, Turkey constitutes a sociologically illuminating, theoretically challenging and politically timely case study. As a modern republic on the margins of Europe and preparing for accession negotiations with the European Union for full membership, Turkey is both a Muslim society and a strictly secular nation-state. This article suggests, first, that the process of modernization and democratization in Turkey has always faced the problem of establishing a delicate balance between politics and religion, and, second, that in this process the more secularism is used by the state elite to control religion, the less pluralistic and democratic the state has become in governing a society where Islam has always played an important role in the symbolic formation of Turkish identity. What is needed in this context is a ‘democratic secular imaginary’ as a more dialogical, tolerant and accommodating strategy of living with difference, enabling us to understand religious claims to difference in their own right, and to approach them clearly and critically.
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