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Political Religion: A User’s Guide

Review products

A. JamesGregor, Totalitarianism and Political Religion. An Intellectual History (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2012), 320 pp., $65, ISBN 0-80-478130-5.

MichaelBurleigh, Sacred Causes. The Clash of Religion and Politics, from the Great War to the War on Terror (New York: Harper Collins, 2007), 557 pp., ISBN 0-06-058095-7.

LarsBruun, Karl ChristianLammers & GertSørensen (eds.), European Self-Reflection between Politics and Religion. The Crisis of Europe in the Twentieth Century (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2013), 247 pp., ISBN 1-137-30828-3.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 October 2015

GEARÓID BARRY*
Affiliation:
School of Humanities, NUI Galway, Galway, Ireland; [email protected]

Extract

In an article published in September 1939, in the very eye of the storm of twentieth-century Europe's ‘age of extremes’, the British historian Christopher Dawson attempted to get to grips with the temper of his times. Opining on what he saw as the failure of nineteenth-century liberal individualism and its deleterious encroachment on spiritual values, he wrote:

Now the coming of the totalitarian state marks the emergence of a new type of politics which recognises no limits and seeks to subordinate every social and intellectual activity to its own ends. Thus the new politics are in a sense more idealistic than the old; they are political religions based on a Messianic hope of social salvation. But at the same time they are more realist since they actually involve a brutal struggle for life between rival powers which are prepared to use every kind of treachery and violence to gain their ends.

When not researching medieval Christian encounters with the Mongols, Dawson wrote history with a grand narrative sweep such as he admired in the work of the German historian Oswald Spengler. His output has recently sparked a revival of interest, with claims that he was one of most significant Catholic historians of the century. Yet this Augustinian pessimist was only one of a broader band of contemporary intellectuals – not all of them religious apologists – to brandish the label of ‘political religion’ as a descriptor, and as a moral warning. Seventy years on, the same moral seriousness characterises several of the books under review here, especially those addressing the more terrifying consequences of political religion in its various forms. For as A. James Gregor declares when introducing his intellectual history of Totalitarianism and Political Religion, ‘the unnumbered dead of the past century’ are surely owed some posthumous explanation:

Amid all the other factors that contributed to the tragedy, there was a kind of creedal ferocity that made every exchange a matter of existential importance. The twentieth century was host to systems of doctrinal conviction that made unorthodox belief a capital affront, made conflict mortal, and all enterprise sacrificial (Gregor, xi).

Type
Review Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2015 

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References

1 Dawson, Christopher, ‘The Claims of Politics’, Scrutiny, 8, 2 (1939), 136–41, here 138Google Scholar.

2 For biography of Dawson (1889–1970), see Hitchcock, James, ‘Christopher Dawson’, American Scholar, 62, 1 (1993), 111–18Google Scholar. See also Birzer, Bradley J., Sanctifying the World: The Augustinian Life and Mind of Christopher Dawson (Front Royal, Va.: Christendom Press, 2007)Google Scholar and the on-going series of republications, ‘The Works of Christopher Dawson’, The Catholic University of America Press, General Editor Don. J. Briel, available at http://cuapress.cua.edu/books/series.cfm (last visited 20 May 2014).

3 David D. Roberts has given an excellent and extensive discussion of ‘political religion’ and its uses and disadvantages as an analytical category, to which I am indebted; Roberts, David D., ‘“Political Religion” and the Totalitarian Departures of Inter-war Europe: On the Uses and Disadvantages of an Analytical Category’, Contemporary European History, 18, 4 (2009), 381414CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

4 Reviewing the recent literature on fascism, for example, António Costa Pinto has written of ‘classificatory “essentialism”’ and the ‘intuitive and dysfunctional use of the concept of totalitarianism’. Pinto, António Costa, ‘European Fascism: The Unfinished Handbook’, Contemporary European History, 21, 2 (2012), 287300, here 298CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

5 Gentile, Emilio, The Sacralization of Politics in Fascist Italy trans. Keith Botsford (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1996)Google Scholar, a translation of Il culto del littorio: La sacralizzazione della politica nell’Italia fascista (Rome and Bari: Laterza, 1993).

6 Roberts, ‘Political Religion’, 383; Gentile, Emilio, ‘The Sacralisation of Politics: Definitions, interpretations and reflections on the question of secular religion and totalitarianism’, Totalitarian Movements and Political Religions, 1, 1 (2000), 1855, here 22CrossRefGoogle Scholar. See also, Gentile, Politics as Religion, trans. George Staunton (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2006), translation of Gentile, Le religioni della politica. Fra democrazie e totalitarismi (Rome and Bari: Laterza, 2001).

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19 Passmore, ‘The Ideological Origins of Fascism before 1914’, 14.

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21 Dal Lago, William Lloyd Garrison and Giuseppe Mazzini, 75.

22 Riall, Lucy, ‘Martyr Cults in Nineteenth-Century Italy’, The Journal of Modern History, 82, 2 (2010), 255–87CrossRefGoogle Scholar; for an Irish comparison, see Newsinger, John, ‘“I Bring Not Peace But A Sword”: The Religious Motif in the Irish War of Independence’, Journal of Contemporary History, 13, 3 (1978), 609–28CrossRefGoogle Scholar; On the nineteenth-century revival of Catholicism and the transnational resonance of the cult of the pope as a ‘living martyr’, see Viaene, Vincent, ‘International History, Religious History, Catholic History: Perspectives for Cross-Fertilization (1830–1914)’, European History Quarterly, 38, 4 (2008), 578607CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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24 Burleigh, Michael, Earthly Powers: The Clash of Religion and Politics in Europe from the French Revolution to the Great War (New York: Harper Collins, 2005)Google Scholar. For a highly critical review of Sacred Causes (2007), see Tony Judt, ‘Defender of the Faith’, The New York Times, 11 Mar. 2007. A more mixed appreciation of Burleigh's twin volumes can be found in Jackson, Paul, ‘Re-enchanting Europeans: Michael Burleigh and Political Religion Theory’, Totalitarian Movements and Political Religions, 9, 1 (2008), 123–8CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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28 Burleigh, Michael, Blood and Rage: A Cultural History of Terrorism (London: Harper Collins, 2009)Google Scholar.

29 Similar reservations can be found in Brian Sandbergh's review of Alessandro Orsini, Anatomy of the Red Brigades: The Religious Mind-Set of Modern Terrorists. H-War, H-Net Reviews. October, 2013. URL: http://w.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id=37917

30 For another perspective, see Mark Mazower, ‘Under the Ustasha’, London Review of Books, 6 Oct. 2011, 29–30.

31 Payne, Stanley G., ‘The NDH State in Comparative Perspective’, Totalitarian Movements and Political Religion, 7, 4 (2006), 409–15CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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33 Winter, Jay, Dreams of Peace and Freedom: Utopian Moments in the Twentieth Century (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2006)Google Scholar.

34 Ceadel, Martin, Pacifism in Britain, 1914–45: The Defining of a Faith (Oxford: Clarendon, 1980)Google Scholar.