This book shows how religious themes about Islam have been widely discussed and circulated in many narratives, taking the religion, mainly, as the main factor behind many troubles in the West. It is sometimes represented with hostility and often viewed as a motto to echo threats but also troubles in the mainstream collective consciousness. As religion is surmounted over various contacts, various portraits remain the significant hub for generating both conflict and peace through demeaning constructs of ideologies. Thus, the book attempts to enrich advanced academic and scientific work on theoretical frameworks of religious studies on Islam with which one can understand and critically engage with notions of an Islamic state, interfaith, peace/violence, and religious freedom, acceptance, and rejection, and non-religious forms of interdisciplinary perspective, where writers, film-makers, digital lives, as well as faculty and students delve into a constructive dialogue about the very nature of rhetoric styles of religions.
After the Postsecular and the Postmodern
A vanguard of scholars asks what comes after the postsecular and postmodern in Continental philosophy of religion. This volume argues philosophy must liberate itself from theological norms and mutate into a new speculative practice to confront the challenges of our time.
