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Book Review: 'Fields of Blood': It's not religion, it's the economy,

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  • Book Review: 'Fields of Blood': It's not religion, it's the economy,

    Pittsburgh Post Gazette
    Nov 2 2014



    Book Review
    'Fields of Blood': It's not religion, it's the economy, stupid!

    Obsessions with greed and power cause war, not matters of faith, scholar argues

    November 2, 2014 12:00 AM
    By Rebecca Denova

    "It's the economy, stupid."

    James Carville's remark during Bill Clinton's 1992 presidential
    campaign may appear trivial as the summation of a book about the
    history of religion and violence, but it is appropriate for Karen
    Armstrong's theme and ultimate conclusion.

    In "Fields of Blood: Religion and the History of Violence," Ms.
    Armstrong challenges the modern myth (particularly after 9/11) that
    all the violence in the world is the result of religious dogma.

    A renowned scholar and popular author ("A History of God," "Muhammad:
    A Prophet for Our Time"), Ms. Armstrong, a former Roman Catholic nun,
    claims that this current politically correct assessment of religion by
    secular liberals is not only misplaced but historically inaccurate.
    All wars, including religious wars, stem from humanity's obsessive
    greed for wealth and power.

    The book is a tour-de-force of the history of the world's major
    religions. Ms. Armstrong repeatedly reminds the reader that prior to
    the modern age, religion was never understood as something personal or
    private, but was integrated into all aspects of daily life.

    ________________________________
    "FIELDS OF BLOOD: RELIGION AND THE HISTORY OF VIOLENCE"
    By Karen Armstrong
    Knopf ($30)
    ________________________________

    For the history of each tradition, she begins with hunter-gatherers
    and their eventual occupation of land, which remained the source of
    wealth for millennia. Aggression over land created the rise of the
    economic classes, which became supported through a warrior ethos. This
    social structure was then validated through religion.

    The reason that Ms. Armstrong refuses to blame religious dogma as the
    sole cause of violence is that the history of each religion includes
    the counterbalance to destructive madness. Each faith has produced
    great teachers, reformers, prophets and mystics, all of whom attempted
    to reconcile economic inequality with humane treatment for all
    classes, justice for the oppressed and an end to warfare.

    However, despite such ideal goals, reformers in each tradition could
    never overcome the competitive, structural violence inherent in
    land-owning agrarian societies. To this day, armed aggression revolves
    around economic and political dominance.

    Although she does not include a comprehensive survey of every detail
    of the historical elements of each faith, such a history would require
    several volumes, and Ms. Armstrong limits the material to her theme of
    economic and political oppression.

    But methodologically, her argument contains a contradiction.
    Consistently pointing out that before the modern age religion could
    never be separated from culture, politics, or economics, she then
    proceeds to dissect some of the historical religious wars (such as the
    Crusades, the Inquisition, and the wars of religion in Europe) by
    highlighting their political and economic motives.

    When she argues that World War I and World War II were the result of
    economics, politics, territorial expansion and the rise of
    nationalism, most Jews will find it difficult to agree that Nazism had
    no basis in religious beliefs. Nor would Armenians agree that their
    suffering under the Ottomans had nothing to do with religious
    differences.

    Her analysis of the modern, secular world, where religion has been
    relegated to the private world of the individual, neglects that the
    secular values of those individuals are nevertheless rooted in a
    traditional religious morality that was appropriated by nation-states
    and their constitutions.

    Similar to her other books, Ms. Armstrong presents an apologia for
    Islam, so that we should not fault the religion for the current
    jihadist atrocities. This is a much needed corrective in American
    culture in terms of educating the American public, but it remains a
    hotly debated issue, particularly because of the level of barbarism
    involved.

    Adherents of many faiths continue to believe that it is permissible to
    kill in "the name of God," and until that concept changes, until that
    concept is no longer utilized to justify political and economic
    oppression, then "religion" will be blamed as the primary cause of
    violence in the world. Nevertheless, "Fields of Blood" is
    thought-provoking as it examines one of the more fascinating elements
    of human civilization.

    Rebecca I. Denova teaches early Christian history in the Department of
    Religious Studies at the University of Pittsburgh ([email protected]).

    http://www.post-gazette.com/ae/books/2014/11/02/Fields-of-Blood-It-s-not-religion-it-s-the-economy-stupid/stories/201411020022

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