Fundamentalism is seen as the major threat to world peace today, a
conclusion impossible to ignore since the events in New York on
September 11, 2001. But what does "fundamentalism" really mean?
Since it was coined by American Protestant evangelicals in the 1920s,
the use of the term "fundamentalist" has expanded to include a diverse
range of radical conservatives and ideological purists, not all
religious. Fundamentalism could now mean both militant Israeli settlers
as well as the Islamist radicals who oppose them, it can mean
Christians, Hindus, animal liberationists, and even Buddhist
nationalists. Here, Middle East expert Malise Ruthven investigates
fundamentalism's historical, social, religious, political, and
ideological roots, and tackles the polemic and stereotypes surrounding
this complex phenomena--one that eludes simple definition, yet urgently
needs to be understood.