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Flere og flere dansker konverterer til Islam

2.500 danskere har vendt kristendommen ryggen til fordel for islam ifølge forskningsprosjektet “Omvendelse til islam i Danmark” ved Københavns Universitet, skriver Berlingske Tidende. Debatten etter 11. september 2001 får flere og spesielt yngre danskere til å konvertere.

– Islam ses som et reelt alternativ til det moderne, hektiske samfunn. Samtidig søker flere mot det religiøse, sier religionshistoriker Kate Østergaard, som sammen med antropolog Tina G. Jensen står bak undersøkelsen.

Det anslås at 700 personer i Danmark har konverteret fra islam til kristendommen.

>> les hele saken i Berlingske Tidende

Tina G. Jensen sier til Danmarks Radio at medienes skremselbildene virker tiltrekkende. Skremselspropaganda “inviterer til, at man undersøger det farlige element og selv læser koranen”, mener hun. “Mediernes fremstilling bliver en slags reklame og får nogle til at sympatisere med muslimerne som en gruppe af undertrykte”

>> Etniske danskere vælger Islam (Danmarks Radio)

>> Unge dansker gjør opprør ved å konvertere til islam

2.500 danskere har vendt kristendommen ryggen til fordel for islam ifølge forskningsprosjektet "Omvendelse til islam i Danmark" ved Københavns Universitet, skriver Berlingske Tidende. Debatten etter 11. september 2001 får flere og spesielt yngre danskere til å konvertere.

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"Germans stick to the ethnic definition more than any other European nation"

Germany’s real problem isn’t “honor” killers or skinheads. Instead, what keeps this increasingly diverse nation from gaining a strong sense of social cohesion is its self-made confusion over what it means to be German in the first place, Gregory Rodriguez writes in a great article in the Los Angeles Times.

He quotes Barbara John, professor of European anthropology at Humboldt University in Berlin, who says: “We stick to the ethnic definition probably more than any other European nation.” He writes:

Indeed, long before Germany’s terrible experiment with ethnic supremacy during the Nazi years, Germans had a narrow view of themselves as a people. Unlike, say, the French, who acknowledge that their culture and language derive from the Romans and that they are akin to other Latin peoples, the Germans see themselves as unique.

What he (and many others as well) wonder about: Have the Germans learned from the nazi-period and World war II?:

Even after World War II, when West Germans did everything in their power to rid their culture of chauvinism and racism, they left intact a citizenship law that was based on blood kinship rather than on place of birth. That meant that the children of Turkish guest workers, born in Germany, were not automatic citizens, yet an ethnic German from Romania whose family had never resided in contemporary Germany was.

(…)

It wasn’t until 2000 that a more open citizenship law took effect. In arguing for a territory-based notion of citizenship, then-Interior Minister Otto Schily proclaimed that Germany needed to rise above “the destructive principle of ethnocracy.”

Six years on, Germans are only beginning to differentiate between their ethnic and civic identities. Ethnic Germans still tend to look on non-ethnic Germans as auslander, or foreigners. Even the media, when they acknowledge minorities as German citizens, use tortured phrases, describing someone as a “Turk who carries a German passport,” for example. Not surprisingly, such marginalization has negative consequences.

Rodriguez believes that the shaping of Germany’s future identity lies in popular culture. He mentions a popular sitcom “Turkish for Beginners,” and Turkish-German novelist Feridun Zaimoglu who says:

“The truth is you can’t talk anymore of a foreign population and a native population, as if they were enemies. As I understand myself, I am a German,” Zaimoglu says. “I love my country, but I don’t make a Wagner opera out of it. I don’t try to define what it means to be German. I just live it.”

>> read the whole article in the Los Angeles Times (link updated 14.10.2019)

SEE ALSO:

For Turks, Germany is home

French versus Germanic national identity

What’s all this fuss about national identity?

What’s a German? The Search for Identity Continues

Germany Survival Bible – a cultural guide for visitors by Spiegel Online

Germany's real problem isn't "honor" killers or skinheads. Instead, what keeps this increasingly diverse nation from gaining a strong sense of social cohesion is its self-made confusion over what it means to be German in the first place, Gregory Rodriguez…

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New Journal: “Anthropology of the Middle East”

Recent political events have shown an alarming lack of awareness in western countries of life in the Middle East. Anthropologists play an important role in making social and cultural developments in the Middle East more comprehensible to a wider world, states Berghahn publication in its announcement about their new journal – Anthropology of the Middle East.

This journal will be run with the editorial of Soheila Shahshahani, Iranian anthropologist in Shahid Beheshti University in Tehran and managing editorial of Brigit Reinel from University of Tubingen.

“There are so many journals in the area of anthropology in the world, but it will be the first special journal in the field of anthropology in the Middle East” Soheila Shahshahani says in an article by the Cultural Heritage News Agency.

Recent political events have shown an alarming lack of awareness in western countries of life in the Middle East. Anthropologists play an important role in making social and cultural developments in the Middle East more comprehensible to a wider world,…

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Aboriginees in Australia: Why talking about culture?

In the Australian magazine On Line Opinion, Anthropologist John Morton criticizes public views of Aboriginess in Australia and argues for avoiding the term culture:

Ever since Europeans first came to Australia, public views of Aborigines have veered between two extremes. Aborigines have been promoted either as disgusting savages or as admired paragons, uncivilised riff-raff or as noble bearers of their culture – bad or good, but never ordinary.

As we now enter a new phase of Aboriginal affairs, Indigenous Australians once again enter the public mind as radically different types of people. On the one hand, we are bombarded with material about dysfunctional communities plagued by drug and alcohol abuse, rampant violence, uncontrolled children and chronic sickness. On the other hand, we routinely hear about “the oldest living culture in the world”, Aboriginal people caring, sharing and looking after country, and the profound qualities of Aboriginal art.

In these circumstances, it’s hard to know what “the oldest living culture in the world” might be. Indeed, it’s hard to know what people are talking about at all when they refer to “culture”.

(…)

We’ve heard a lot of arguments about the “true” nature of Aboriginal culture in recent weeks. Some say Aboriginal culture fosters violence against women and children. Others gainsay this and suggest that violence is cultural breakdown stemming from neglect and marginalisation by mainstream Australian culture. There are many more axes to grind in relation to employment, health and education, but always with a view to promoting a good or bad image of Aboriginal people, not to mention a good or bad image of the “mainstream culture” which provides Aboriginal services.

(…)

This blame game doesn’t give us “the truth” about Aboriginal or any other culture. It simply reduces the extremely complicated relationship between Aboriginal communities and all the arms of the state (governments, bureaucracies, the police, land councils, schools, health centres, etc.) with which they engage. Recourse to “culture” always seems to deliver imagined parodies of real life, transforming it into something inordinately valuable or completely worthless.

British cultural critic Raymond Williams once remarked that “culture” is “one of the two or three most complicated words in the English language”. (…) In fact, it’s an empty word: you can fill it with pretty much anything you like. That’s why it functions so well in slogans.

In the meantime, there are many people both inside and outside Aboriginal communities who recognise that there are big problems in Aboriginal affairs. It’d be good if they could all be allowed to get on with the job of finding appropriate solutions to those problems without “culture” getting in the way.

>> read the whole article in On Line Opinion

SEE ALSO:

“I’m not the indigenous person people want me to be”

From Stone Age to 21st century – More “fun” with savages

Ancient People: We are All Modern Now

Our obsession with the notion of the primitive society

The Culture Struggle: How cultures are instruments of social power

“Quit using the word ‘culture’ wherever possible”

In the Australian magazine On Line Opinion, Anthropologist John Morton criticizes public views of Aboriginess in Australia and argues for avoiding the term culture:

Ever since Europeans first came to Australia, public views of Aborigines have veered between two extremes. Aborigines…

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Trying to catch up… (notes)

(post in progress) Threatening deadlines prevented me from updating this blog as often as I should/ would like to and I haven't checked the news for a while. Here are at least some of recent blog posts:

Alex Golub: Article on…

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