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Contesting Fundamentalisms
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01 September 2004

Fundamentalism has been thrust into the limelight by recent world events. It is necessary to understand fundamentalism in order to contest its claims, but talk of fundamentalism lacks precision.
In Contesting Fundamentalisms, the authors cast a wide net to include an array of ideological positions in social and cultural movements, as well as more traditional areas of religious practice. The chapters critically investigate the nature of fundamentalism in economics, nationalism, ethnic relations, Aboriginal politics, gender politics and religious practice. Each of these areas is made clearer, or shown in a different light, by viewing them through a fundamentalist lens. These essays invite a multidimensional understanding of whom or what may be called “fundamentalist” and the dilemmas that this naming creates.
Carol Schick (Edited by)
Carol Schick is an associate professor in the Faculty of Education at the University of Regina.
JoAnn Jaffe (Edited by)
JoAnn Jaffe is an associate professor of Sociology and Social Studies at the University of Regina.
: Considering Fundamentalism
: Cultural and Ethnic Fundamentalism: Identity, Liberation and Oppression
: Real Indians: Cultural Revitalization and Fundamentalism in Aboriginal Education
: The Makings of a Post-Zionist Discourse: Jewish Fundamentalisms and a Critical Politics of Identity
: More Than a Pejorative Epithet: Islamic Fundamentalism(s)
: Sifting Islam from Fundamentalism: Muslim Feminists Struggle
: Lean and Mean: Hegemonic Masculinity and Fundamentalism
: With Us or With the Terrorists: American Hyperpatriotism as Fundamentalism
: The Market will Make it Right: Neoliberalism as Market Fundamentalism
: Religious Fundamentalism Meets the Charter: Equality Rights and Re-Privatized Public Services
: Slippery and Unstable: School and Human Rights