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About The Book
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The global world debates secularism freedom of belief faith-based norms the states arbitration of religious conflicts and the place of the sacred in the public sphere. In facing these issues Britain India and South Africa stand out as unique laboratories. They have greatly influenced the rest of the world. As single countries and together as a whole the three have moved from the colonial clash of antagonistic religions (of your gods) to an era when it has become impossible to dissociate your god from my god. Today both belong to the same blurred reality of our gods. Through a narrative account of British South African and Indian court cases from 1857 to 2009 the author draws an unconventional history of the process leading from the encounter with the gods of the other to the forging of a postmodern common and global religion. Across ages borders faiths and laws the three countries have experienced the ambivalent interaction of society politics and beliefs. Hence the lesson the world might learn from them: our gods promise an idealized purity but they can only become real in the everyday creation of mixed identities hybrid deities and shared fears and hopes. As Marco Ventura well understands the theory and application of law is a reflection of societys evolution. This is especially true in the English-speaking world where case law is all-important. In the commonwealth countries he has studied society has grown steadily more multicultural and multireligious with a gloriously varied and unpredictable set of consequences for the practice of law. Through the prism of law he has gained some fascinating insights into the deeper social and cultural trends at work in a globalizing world. --Bruce Clark writer on religious affairs The Economist Religion has become an increasingly significant factor in the modern world order. Marco Ventura finds new ways to grasp the nature of this shift. He looks at the complex process of law and law-making in relation to these explosive Gods in three very different places: Britain India and South Africa. The web of connections that emerges merits the widest possible attention. --Grace Davie Professor of Sociology University of Exeter Marco Ventura is Professor of Law and Religion at the Catholic University of Leuven in Belgium and at the University of Siena in Italy. He is also associate member of the Centre on Society Law and Religion of Strasbourg France.