Full Description
Across Europe, racialised groups and other minorities are often subject to discriminatory policies and practices. Facing Discrimination offers insight into the dynamics of religious beliefs and practices among those who are discriminated against, showing how religion as a source of agency interacts with processes of marginalization. Six micro-level studies from Spain, Portugal and the Netherlands examine stigmatised groups and individuals, analysing how religious involvement in its multiple forms and interpretations, affects the capacity to respond to exclusion and shape the acceptance or rejection of imposed categories.
Contents
List of Illustrations
Introduction
Johanna M. Lems and Ana I. Planet Contreras
Chapter 1. Between Presence and a Non-presence: Visibility, Transparency and Practices of Opacity among Dutch Muslims in the Public Sphere
Martijn de Koning
Chapter 2. Alternative Standpoint Religion: Producing Religious Agencies in the LGBT+ Christian Association of Madrid
José Barrera Blanco
Chapter 3. Modern Charity: Citizenship, Gender and Islam in Portugal
Raquel Carvalheira
Chapter 4. Sexuality, Migration and Religion: Migrated Gay Men Living in Madrid
Rafael Camarero Montesinos
Chapter 5. 'Life Is a Battlefield': Spiritual Warfare as a Trans-Semiotic and Trans-Sensory Negotiation in an African Neo-Pentecostal Church in Madrid
Michele Cunico
Chapter 6. Creating Change from Within: Young Muslim Women and Agency in Transformation
Johanna M. Lems
Conclusion
Johanna M. Lems and Ana I. Planet Contreras
Index



