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RELIGIOUS WOMEN (2) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   128312


Religious women for peace and reconciliation in contemporary In / Qurtuby, Sumanto Al   Journal Article
Qurtuby, Sumanto Al Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract Sumanto Al Qurtuby, discusses how women bridged the Muslim/Christian religious divide that had brought interreligious conflict to eastern Indonesia during a transition to greater democracy after the downfall of Suharto in 1988. The author argues that it is wrong to assume that all women promote peace. In Indonesia, many women fought to support the triumph of their own religion through violence. However, some of these women combatants abandoned violence and joined the interfaith peacebuilding efforts of others after they began to take traction.
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2
ID:   191784


Remaking ethnic nationalism: evangelical protestant women’s discourses of multiculturalism in South Korea / Jung, Gowoon   Journal Article
Jung, Gowoon Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Researchers have argued that religion has direct and indirect connections with nationalism, and they have called for conceptual clarity about the role of religion in the construction of nationalism. I extend the insights of this scholarship into reevaluating the alteration of ethnic nationalism in Korea. Drawing on interviews with evangelical Protestant women attending a megachurch in Seoul, this study explores who evangelical women are willing to include as members of Korea and in what conditions the women are inclined to include these individuals. My findings suggest that women use evangelical mission work as a rhetorical device to create a broader membership category, regardless of skin color, to imagine members of Korea. Women’s participation in volunteer works shapes their expectation of immigrants’ appreciation of Korean language, food, and civic etiquette. Challenging the prevalent view that ethnic nationalism is declining, I argue that it has survived but shifted its focus from bloodline to ethnic culture.
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