“…de Vries and Sullivan, 2006; Beckford, 2012) has focused attention on the religion/secular binary, which has a much more contentious history than is often acknowledged (Asad, 2003; Shakman Hurd, 2008, 2015; Mahmood, 2015; Warner, Van Antwerpen, and Calhoun, 2010). Despite careful distinctions that Habermas (2013) and his interlocutors have made regarding, for example, differences between the secular, secularism, and secularization (Casanova, 2013), Habermas has not addressed the ways in which these terms can function as modes of governmentality (Fernando, 2014; Selby, 2014), or what Erin Wilson (2017) has referred to as “secular ontologies,” where, it is argued, secularism is made normative in such a way that models and worldviews that do not fit within its general parameters are deemed regressive in an a priori fashion (see Fallers Sullivan, 2005; Martin, 2017).…”