fundamentalism
From: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
|
Date: 2008
fundamentalism 1 In Protestantism, religious movement that arose among conservative members of various Protestant denominations early in the 20th cent., with the object of maintaining traditional interpretations of the Bible and of the doctrines of the Christian faith in the face of Darwinian evolution , secularism, and the emergence of liberal theology.
A group protesting "modernist" tendencies in the churches circulated a 12-volume publication called The Fundamentals (1909-12), in which five points of doctrine were set forth as fundamental: the Virgin birth, the physical resurrection of Jesus, the infallibility of the Scriptures, the substitutional atonement, and the physical second coming of Christ. The debate between fundamentalists and modernists was most acute among the Baptists and the Presbyterians but also arose within other denominations. In a highly publicized case, the so-called Monkey Trial (1925), the fundamentalist leader William Jennings Bryan won Tennessee's case against J. T. Scopes, for teaching evolution in the public schools (see Scopes trial ). Other attempts, however, by fundamentalists in the 1920s to rid the churches of modernism and the schools of evolution failed.
By the 1930s many fundamentalists began to withdraw into independent churches and splinter denominations, and fundamentalism became identified in the public mind with anti-intellectualism and extremism. Many fundamentalists rejected this image, and a movement was begun in the late 1940s to present their position in both a more scholarly and popular way. This movement, known as neoevangelicalism (or, more simply, evangelicalism), sought a wider following from the major denominations through its various schools, youth programs, publications, and radio broadcasts. The separatists saw these efforts as compromising fundamentalist views and sought to disassociate themselves from these religious institutions and such well-known evangelical fundamentalists as Billy Graham .
Since the late 1970s fundamentalists have embraced electoral and legislative politics and the "electronic church" in their fight against perceived threats to traditional religious values: so-called secular humanism, Communism, feminism, legalized abortion, homosexuality, and the ban on school prayer. They have continued to oppose the teaching of evolution in the schools or have sought to have creationism or intelligent design taught as well. In recent years some fundamentalists have also attacked the teaching of scientific theories on the origins of the universe (see cosmology ). Those Americans who describe themselves as fundamentalists (approximately 25% of the U.S. population) have become a political bloc in their own right. During the 1980s they made up a large portion of the new Christian right that helped put Ronald Reagan into the White House, and early in the 21st cent. they aided significantly in the election of George W. Bush to the presidency. The Moral Majority, founded by the fundamentalist Baptist pastor Jerry Falwell in 1979, was the most visible example of this new trend in the 1980s; the most prominent current group is the Christian Coalition, headed by Pat Robertson . Moderate fundamentalists and conservative evangelicals continue to forge new alliances, for example in the Southern Baptist Convention, to wield political and denominational control.
Bibliography: See N. Furniss, The Fundamentalist Controversy, 1918-1931 (1954, repr. 1963); L. Gasper, The Fundamentalist Movement, 1930-1956 (1963); E. R. Sandeen, The Roots of Fundamentalism (1970); M. Ellingsen, The Evangelical Movement (1988); W. H. Capps, The New Religious Right (1990).
2 In other religions. In Islam, the term "fundamentalism" encompasses various modern Muslim leaders, groups, and movements opposed to secularization in Islam and Islamic countries and seeking to reassert traditional beliefs and practices. After the Shiite revolution (1979) led by Ayatollah Khomeini in Iran, the term was applied to a number of ultra-conservative or militant Islamic movements there and in other countries, such as the Taliban of Afghanistan. There are both Shiite and Sunni fundamentalist leaders and groups, such as the Ayatollah Khomeini and the Muslim Brotherhood . The term has also been applied to Hindu nationalist groups in India (see Hinduism ; Bharatiya Janata party ).
Author not available, FUNDAMENTALISM.,
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press
For permission to reuse this article, contact Copyright Clearance Center.
Related articles from HighBeam Research:
|
Catholic reaction to fundamentalism.
Theological Studies; 6/1/1996; Shea, William M.; 10712 words;
... John F. Whealon, Fighting Fundamentalism, America 153 (October 12, 32985) 212; and Challenging Fundamentalism, America 155 (September 27 ... 136-38. (24) Whealon, Fighting Fundamentalism 212. (25) Whealon Challenging Fundamentalism 136. (26) Ibid. 137. (27 ... 499-524. The comments on ...
|
|
Fundamentalism: race, truth, and democracy in a global world.(INTRODUCTION)(Editorial)
Journal of Ecumenical Studies; 1/1/2007; Powell, John A. Trammel, Ming Shi Newhart, Daniel; 1818 words;
Fundamentalism, a word that evokes multiple associations in the ... originated in a two-day panel discussion on the role of fundamentalism in a religiously and racially diverse world, held ... Ohio, in the Spring of 2006. The conference, titled Fundamentalism: Race, Truth, and Democracy in a Global World, ...
|
|
Sikh fundamentalism.
The Journal of the American Oriental Society; 1/1/1998; McLeod, W.H.; 9613 words;
... This also sounds like fundamentalism. Ordinary members of ... which sound rather like fundamentalism. Here it must be clearly ... third volume of The Fundamentalism Project, Oberoi draws ... letter to World Sikh News he has expressed disappointment ... objection. To detect true fundamentalism in ...
|
|
Jews and fundamentalism.
Journal of Ecumenical Studies; 1/1/2007; Heilman, Samuel C.; 6666 words;
Traditionalism versus Fundamentalism To comprehend what fundamentalism is, let us first distinguish it from traditionalism ... the public square. As Bruce Lawrence put it, fundamentalism is the affirmation of religious authority as ...
|
|
Religious fundamentalism and human rights.
Journal of International Affairs; 6/22/1996; Vyver, Johan D. van der; 7692 words;
The concept of religious fundamentalism is in the eyes of the beholder ... unbecoming extremes. And, of course, fundamentalism can signify different things ... people. In current parlance, fundamentalism in matters of religion has ...
|
|
Religious Fundamentalism in the Contemporary World: Critical Social and Political Issues
Journal of Third World Studies; 10/1/2007; Jones, Garth N; 1692 words;
Saha, Santosh C. (ed.). Religious Fundamentalism in the Contemporary World: Critical ... pieces of scholarship on religious fundamentalism are assembled together in incongruous ... topic. A lot of holes exist. Religious fundamentalism has replaced Marxism as the driving ...
|
|
The Scopes trial and Southern fundamentalism in black and white: race, region, and religion.
Journal of Southern History; 2/1/2004; Moran, Jeffrey P.; 11400 words;
... Colored America when he championed fundamentalism at the Scopes trial. Negroes ... syndicated column for the Preston News Service (an African American ... The Sun Do Move suggest that fundamentalism met opposition even within African ... evolution between the extremes of fundamentalism and mere ...
|
|
Fundamentalisms on the rise.(fundamentalisms)
off our backs; 3/1/2006; Ruby, Jennie; 1909 words;
Whether it is Hindu fundamentalism fueling violence against Muslims and others in India, Muslim fundamentalism taking away women's rights in Afghanistan, Algeria or Iran, Catholic fundamentalism in Austria, or fundamentalist Christians unduly ...
|
|
Boundaries of Faith: Geographical Perspectives on Religious Fundamentalism. (Geographical Reviews).(Book Review)
The Geographical Review; 1/1/2002; Bhardwaj, Surinder M.; 1059 words;
BOUNDARIES OF FAITH: Geographical Perspectives on Religious Fundamentalism. By ROGER W. STUMP. 250 pp.; maps, ills., bibliog., index. Lanham, Md.: Rowman & Littlefield, 2000. $69.00 (cloth), ISBN 0847693198; $28.95 (paper), ISBN 0847693201. Fundamentalism conjures up images of fanaticism, radical ...
|
|
The cultural contradictions of: Christian fundamentalism: in the second part of his essay, Guy Rundle continues to make links between Christian fundamentalism and hyper-modernity.(Critical essay)
Arena Magazine; 8/1/2006; Rundle, Guy; 4062 words;
... have become distant memories, fundamentalism offers a gloss of a meaningful ... finding it in God, the new fundamentalism goes in exactly the opposite ... the liberal-Left of the new fundamentalism amounts to nothing more than ... then one of the ways in which fundamentalism does provide some sort of ...
|
|
Fundamentalisms and American pluralism *.
Journal of Ecumenical Studies; 1/1/2007; Numrich, Paul D.; 2890 words;
... words, there is a place for fundamentalism to make its case in American ... points about semi- or quasi-fundamentalism on the one hand and classic fundamentalism on the other. You will ... look at semi- or quasi-fundamentalism. Criticizing secular worldviews ... classic American Protestant ...
|
|
Teaching the politics of Islamic fundamentalism.
PS: Political Science & Politics; 3/1/1998; Kazemzadeh, Masoud; 6619 words;
... fundamentalist Islamists, Islamic fundamentalism has become the dominant force in much ... Islamic world. The rise of Islamic fundamentalism has generated several issues of analytical ... Many scholars believe that Islamic fundamentalism will precipitate violent international ...
|
|
The Scopes Trial and Southern Fundamentalism in Black and White: Race, Region, and Religion
The Journal of Southern History; 2/1/2004; Moran, Jeffrey P; 8857 words;
... of a large portion of Colored America when he championed fundamentalism at the Scopes trial. Negroes, being by far and large, fundamentalists ... newspapers nationwide. In his syndicated column for the Preston News Service (an African American wire service), Ernest Rice ... against Hatcher's revival of "The Sun Do ...
|
|
The antinomies of 'Feminism' and 'Islam:' the limits of a Marxist analysis.(Feminism and Islamic Fundamentalism: The Limits of Postmodern Analysis)(Book Review)
The Middle East Women's Studies Review; 3/22/2003; Barlas, Asma; 1748 words;
... book (Feminism and Islamic Fundamentalism: the Limits of Postmodern ... feminism is an arm of Islamic fundamentalism which serves--sometimes ... nexus between feminism and fundamentalism, Western secular intellectuals ... Discontents. En route, she maps out the evolution in Western ... the dangers of ...
|
|
Some thoughts on Islamic fundamentalism.
Free Inquiry; 3/22/1995; Bullough, Vern L.; 1459 words;
... has been the growing influence of fundamentalism. In fact, some of the same forces ... resulted in individuals embracing fundamentalism. This is particularly true in the ... socialism to the rebirth of Protestant fundamentalism, to utopian dreaming. For a time ...
|
See all results from premium newspaper and magazine articles, images, maps and more at HighBeam Research.
Related articles from newspapers, magazines and other sources:
Fundamentalism: a theory.
Cross Currents; 9/22/2005; Farley, Edward; 11857 words;
|
Fundamentalism.(Book Review)
Baptist History and Heritage; 3/22/2005; Deweese, Charles W.; 989 words;
|
Saha, Santosh C. (ed.). Religious Fundamentalism in the Contemporary World: Critical Social and Political Issues.(Book review)
Journal of Third World Studies; 9/22/2007; Jones, Garth N.; 1781 words;
|
Women and the making of fundamentalism. ('Fundamentalism and Gender,' Ed. by John Stratton Hawley, and 'Fundamentalism and Gender: 1875 to the Present,' by Margaret Lamberts Bendroth)
The Christian Century; 9/7/1994; Appleby, R. Scott; 2622 words;
|
Shahak, Israel and Norton Mezvisnky. Jewish Fundamentalism in Israel, 2d ed.(Book review)
Arab Studies Quarterly (ASQ); 3/22/2006; 462 words;
|
The Challenge of Fundamentalism for Interreligious Dialogue.
Cross Currents; 3/22/2000; HUFF, PETER A.; 3600 words;
|
Islamic fundamentalism feared, misunderstood: political repression and poverty fuel a religious movement.(Islam)
National Catholic Reporter; 10/8/2004; Patterson, Margot; 2238 words;
|
Religious Fundamentalism in the Contemporary World: Critical Social and Political Issues.(Book Review)
Sociology of Religion; 3/22/2005; Schmit, Nina; 843 words;
|
"It's Religious Fundamentalism, Stupid".(Brief Article)(Book Review)
Small Press Bookwatch; 2/1/2005; 257 words;
|
World fundamentalism examined: an 'eclave culture' spawns a worldwide movement that is here to stay.(Strong Religion: The Rise of Fundamentalisms Around the World)(Book Review)
National Catholic Reporter; 10/10/2003; Holst, Wayne A.; 908 words;
|
|
|