The second half of the twentieth century witnessed a radical shift in the relations between religions (Swidler 1990). As Catherine Cornille explains, “[r]ather than competing with one another over territories, converts or claims, religions have generally come to adopt a more conciliatory and constructive attitude toward one another, collaborating in social projects and exchanging views on common religious questions” (Cornille 2013, p. xii). Different sociopolitical factors such as globalization and various processes of secularization, pluralization, and decolonization, as well as the rise of religious extremism and the ecological crisis, help account for the so-called dialogical turn and the rapid proliferation of interfaith initiatives at local, national, and international levels (Halafoff 2013; Lamine 2004).
CITATION STYLE
Moyaert, M. (2019). Broadening the Scope of Interreligious Studies: Interrituality. In Interreligious Relations and the Negotiation of Ritual Boundaries (pp. 1–34). Springer International Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-05701-5_1
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