Presenting the Second Talk in the IES Spring Speaker Series
Impossible Pluralism? Religious Minorities, Migrants and Unsettled European Democracy - a talk by Elisabeth Becker
Is pluralism possible in Europe? Are far-right parties like the Alternative für Deutschland (AfD) and the Front National (FN) fringe movements, or do they say something unsettling about the general state of democracy in Europe, today? The Post-World War II era in Europe was characterized by both devastation and hope for democracy, including a renewed political dedication to protecting plurality. Yet it was also characterized by the large-scale migration of guestworker and postcolonial migrants. Since these migrations, European nation-states and societies have grappled with the position of those who they first cast as foreigners, later as ethnic others, and today as Muslims in the European context. These boundaries between "us" and the other within came perhaps most pointedly into focus with the refugee crisis in 2015 that magnified long-standing conversations regarding who belongs to (and who is seen to threaten) the European imaginary, and the casting of both Muslims and refugees as uncivil in the political push for Brexit.
This talk is co-sponsored by:
Department of Sociology
Jewish Studies Program
Comparative Muslim SocietyProgram
Institute for Comparative Modernities
Religious Studies Program