Show Summary Details
- Title Pages
- Acknowledgements
- Contributors
- Introduction
- 1 Why Can't We All Just Get Along with Each Other?
- 2 Citizenship, Religion, and Political Liberalism
- 3 Between Postsecular Society and the Neutral State
- 4 Translation, Conversation, or Hospitality?
- 5 Messianic Ethics and Diaspora Communities
- 6 Christian Hope and Public Reason
- 7 Not Translation, but Conversation
- 8 Religious Education and Democratic Character
- 9 Religion and Public Reason in the Global Politics of Human Rights
- 10 The Public Presence of Religion in England
- 11 Religion, Rhetoric, and Running for Office
- 12 Islam and the Secularized Nation
- Conclusion
- Index
(p.v) Acknowledgements
(p.v) Acknowledgements
- Source:
- Religious Voices in Public Places
- Publisher:
- Oxford University Press
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- Title Pages
- Acknowledgements
- Contributors
- Introduction
- 1 Why Can't We All Just Get Along with Each Other?
- 2 Citizenship, Religion, and Political Liberalism
- 3 Between Postsecular Society and the Neutral State
- 4 Translation, Conversation, or Hospitality?
- 5 Messianic Ethics and Diaspora Communities
- 6 Christian Hope and Public Reason
- 7 Not Translation, but Conversation
- 8 Religious Education and Democratic Character
- 9 Religion and Public Reason in the Global Politics of Human Rights
- 10 The Public Presence of Religion in England
- 11 Religion, Rhetoric, and Running for Office
- 12 Islam and the Secularized Nation
- Conclusion
- Index