Martyrdom and Sacrifice in a Time of Terror

Social Research: An International Quarterly 75:417-434 (2008)
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Abstract

This article is organized around the idea that the concept of sacrifice gains meaning within the context of cosmic war. Cosmic war is understood as arising out of religious traditions in terms of an intimate and ultimate tension, as Durkheim pointed out, between the sacred and the profane. This fundamental dichotomy gives rise to images of a great encounter between cosmic forces—order versus chaos, good versus evil, truth versus falsehood—that worldly struggles mimic. Thus the idea of cosmic war is compelling to religious activists because it ennobles and exalts those who consider themselves a part of it—especially those in desperate situations and who organize defiantly in resisting them. In that sense the concept is not just an effort at delegitimization but at dehumiliation: it provides escape from humiliating and impossible predicaments for those who otherwise would feel immobilized by them. By mapping the relationship between religious traditions, cosmic war, and sacrifice the paper animates the question as to why martyrdom is central to religion and the production of meaning.

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