Search
Program Calendar
Browse By Day
Browse By Time
Browse By Person
Browse By Session Type
Personal Schedule
Sign In
Access for All
Exhibit Hall
Hotels
WiFi
Search Tips
Moving beyond scholarship that links xenophobia to denominational forces, this paper argues that religious frontiers produce fear for strangers. Spatial proximity to religious borders simultaneously enhances community strength, religious discipline and threat perception. Together, these three forces create collective fear for those who are from outside the community. The author develops this argument by analyzing a newly created database on folklore and religion in approximately 20,000 towns and villages in religiously divided Germany during the 1930s. Spatial econometrics reveal that inhabitants of Protestant towns in the proximity of Catholic towns (and vice versa) were more likely to tell their children stories featuring xenophobic bogeymen. Instrumental variable analysis using 16th century religious boundaries, allow the author to rule out pure selection effects and establish causal order. Religious frontier effects were particularly strong in towns that had stronger community norms, were better organized, had militias, displayed more religious discipline and were located in areas where religious conflict had been more intense. The findings shed new light on how identity politics and state-formation unintentionally shape how citizens are taught to see and feel the world around them.