Fundamentalist city? : religiosity and the remaking of urban space
Material type: TextPublication details: London & New York Routledge 2011Description: xii,313pISBN:- 0415779367
- 307.76 ALS
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book | CEPT Library | Faculty of Planning | 307.76 ALS | Available | Status:Catalogued;Bill No:158 | 008859 |
CONTENTS Preface vii The Contributors xi Part I: Fundamentalisms: Between City and Nation 1 1 The Fundamentalist City? 3 Nezar AtSetyyad 2 Why in the City? Explaining Urban Fundamentalism 27 Inger Furseth 3 The Civility of Inegalitarian Citizenships 51 James Holston Part II: Fundamentalisms and Urbanism 73 4 American National Identity, the Rise of the Modern City, and the Birth of Protestant Fundamentalism 75 Rhys H. Williams 5 Producing and Contesting the 'Communalized City': Hindutva Politics and Urban Space in Ahmedabad 99 Renu Desai 6 On Religiosity and Spatiality: Lessons from I lezbollah in Beirut 125 Mona Harb 7 Hamas in Gaza Refugee Camps: The Construction of Trapped Spaces for the Survival of Fundamentalism 155 Fmncesca Giovannini Part III: Identity, Tradition, and Fundamentalisms 175 8 Abraham's Urban Footsteps: Political Geography and Religious Radicalism in Israel/Palestine 177 Oren Yiftachel and fiatya Roded 9 Fundamentalism at the Urban Frontier: the Taliban in Peshawar 209 Mejgan Massoumi 10 Taking the (Inner) City for God: Ambiguities of Urban Social Engagement among Conservative White Evangelicals 235 Omri Klisha 11 Postsecular Urbanisms: Situating Delhi within the Rhetorical Landscape of Hindutva 257 Mrinalini Rajagopalan 12 Excluding and Including the 'Other' in the Global City: Religious Mission among Muslim and Catholic Migrants in London 283 John Bade Index 303
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