Events

Book Launch: Shared Sacred Sites in South Asia

A book launch for the Shared Sacred Sites in South Asia: Negotiating Coexistence and Belonging, edited by Laurent Gayer, Christophe Jaffrelot, Aminah Mohammad-Arif and Grégoire Schlemmer

About the book

A revelatory account of the cohabitation of religious traditions and practices in South Asia.

Across the world, religious and cultural identities are being weaponized for political gains. South Asia is no exception, with frequent conflicts between faith communities strengthening politico-religious organisations, and severely straining social cohesion. Yet this region also has a history of religious intermingling, exemplified by shared sacred sites such as saints’ tombs, temples, churches, and natural elements, serving as places of worship. Such ‘sites in common’ offer rich insights into the dynamics of religious interaction. This book investigates them through two key questions.

First, it examines what shared places of worship can reveal about plural societies in the midst of persistent religious and ethnic nationalism. Are they exceptional? Do they reflect or transcend socio-religious fault lines? The authors approach coexistence as a tensile equilibrium, in which confl ict is no stranger to sharing: South Asia’s shared sacred sites are seen as social laboratories, where communities experiment with pluralism and its challenges.

Second, the contributors consider the politics of belonging, questioning the boundaries between groups and religions. They examine the logics at work in people’s visits to places outside their own religious affi liation, challenging theoretical frameworks of religious demarcation and showing the importance of other markers, such as caste, class, language and gender.

 

Gayer Shared Sacred Sites In South Asia Hurst PBK