Skip to main content

Lund University Publications

LUND UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

Keeping Religion in the Closet : How Legible Religion Shapes Multi-Faith Spaces

Bobrowicz, Ryszard LU orcid (2022)
Abstract
This dissertation focuses on multi-faith spaces and the tendencies in approaching religion that lie behind them. It argues that an overarching conceptual framework exists that conditions these tendencies, and which is described in the dissertation as “legible religion.” Such a framework results from the broader administrative attempts to make different phenomena “legible,” that is, simplified and reduced only to the features relevant from the administrative perspective. Legible religion is a framework that reduces the phenomena labeled “religious” for administrative purposes and promotes two central administrative tendencies in approaching religion: religion as a potential threat, with attempts to control it and limit it to the preferred... (More)
This dissertation focuses on multi-faith spaces and the tendencies in approaching religion that lie behind them. It argues that an overarching conceptual framework exists that conditions these tendencies, and which is described in the dissertation as “legible religion.” Such a framework results from the broader administrative attempts to make different phenomena “legible,” that is, simplified and reduced only to the features relevant from the administrative perspective. Legible religion is a framework that reduces the phenomena labeled “religious” for administrative purposes and promotes two central administrative tendencies in approaching religion: religion as a potential threat, with attempts to control it and limit it to the preferred types of religiosity; and religion as a utility, with attempts to functionally utilize its resources. Indifference is a third approach regarding those religions that were readapted to the administrative preference. The dissertation discusses this framework in three parts. Part 1 discusses its theoretical aspects: the prerequisites, the narratives that established it and allowed it to function (secularization and the “return of religion”), and their policy implementations (secularism and its re-adaptation to increasing diversity). Part 2 discusses how the normative assumptions described in part 1 are implemented in the practice of multi-faith spaces. It shows that the perception of multi-faith spaces is as much conditioned by the normative assumptions inherent in their materiality as by their context and the imposition of meaning by the beholders. Part 3 discusses the implication of the legible religion framework. It argues that such a framework is problematic because it impacts the vitality of the affected phenomena by depriving them of features that make them valuable for non-administrative stakeholders. In response, it argues that subsidiarity, conflict re-conceptualization, and encounter may provide three fruitful directions to pursue in search of solutions to the highlighted problems.

To receive a digital copy of the dissertation, please contact the author at: ryszard.bobrowicz@ctr.lu.se (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
supervisor
opponent
  • professor Susanne Wigorts Yngvesson, Enskilda Högskolan Stockholm
organization
publishing date
type
Thesis
publication status
published
subject
keywords
multi-faith spaces, religion, Europe, state, policy-making, religious diversity
pages
346 pages
publisher
Lund University (Media-Tryck)
defense location
LUX C121
defense date
2022-06-07 09:00:00
ISBN
978-91-89415-20-1
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
41c490fc-9f4f-41a7-ac73-e52fab546ece
date added to LUP
2022-04-26 17:42:00
date last changed
2023-09-06 10:19:15
@phdthesis{41c490fc-9f4f-41a7-ac73-e52fab546ece,
  abstract     = {{This dissertation focuses on multi-faith spaces and the tendencies in approaching religion that lie behind them. It argues that an overarching conceptual framework exists that conditions these tendencies, and which is described in the dissertation as “legible religion.” Such a framework results from the broader administrative attempts to make different phenomena “legible,” that is, simplified and reduced only to the features relevant from the administrative perspective. Legible religion is a framework that reduces the phenomena labeled “religious” for administrative purposes and promotes two central administrative tendencies in approaching religion: religion as a potential threat, with attempts to control it and limit it to the preferred types of religiosity; and religion as a utility, with attempts to functionally utilize its resources. Indifference is a third approach regarding those religions that were readapted to the administrative preference. The dissertation discusses this framework in three parts. Part 1 discusses its theoretical aspects: the prerequisites, the narratives that established it and allowed it to function (secularization and the “return of religion”), and their policy implementations (secularism and its re-adaptation to increasing diversity). Part 2 discusses how the normative assumptions described in part 1 are implemented in the practice of multi-faith spaces. It shows that the perception of multi-faith spaces is as much conditioned by the normative assumptions inherent in their materiality as by their context and the imposition of meaning by the beholders. Part 3 discusses the implication of the legible religion framework. It argues that such a framework is problematic because it impacts the vitality of the affected phenomena by depriving them of features that make them valuable for non-administrative stakeholders. In response, it argues that subsidiarity, conflict re-conceptualization, and encounter may provide three fruitful directions to pursue in search of solutions to the highlighted problems.<br/><br/>To receive a digital copy of the dissertation, please contact the author at: ryszard.bobrowicz@ctr.lu.se}},
  author       = {{Bobrowicz, Ryszard}},
  isbn         = {{978-91-89415-20-1}},
  keywords     = {{multi-faith spaces; religion; Europe; state; policy-making; religious diversity}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Lund University (Media-Tryck)}},
  school       = {{Lund University}},
  title        = {{Keeping Religion in the Closet : How Legible Religion Shapes Multi-Faith Spaces}},
  year         = {{2022}},
}