Anxieties of the Dominant: Legal, Social, and Religious in the Politics of Religious Conversion in India


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Date

2022

Publication Type

Journal Article

ETH Bibliography

yes

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Abstract

The promulgation of the new state-level conversion laws in India or some changes in already existing ones by ordinances is premised upon various conspiracy theories of Hindu fundamentalists against Muslims. Implicit in and placed at the centre of these new anti-conversion laws and public debates thereof is the conspiracy theory of love-jihad that Muslim men lure Hindu women on the pretext of love and get them convert to Islam to eventually outnumber the Hindu majority. This article argues that the anti-conversion laws in India result from anxieties of the dominant caste and class regarding gender and caste, leading to the imposition of the mainstream orthodox religious and political will upon the marginalized. The creation of anti-conversion laws is based on assumptions, fears, conspiracy theories, and moral and religious values primarily shared by the ‘upper-caste’ section across the political spectrum. Furthermore, it also shows a growing nexus between conservative religious forces and state apparatuses that restricts religious and social mobility of the marginalized sections through legal changes.

Publication status

published

Editor

Book title

Volume

11 (23)

Pages / Article No.

343 - 367

Publisher

Oxford University Press

Event

Edition / version

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History

Organisational unit

03814 - Fischer-Tiné, Harald / Fischer-Tiné, Harald check_circle

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