RT Article T1 Fantasies of Sovereignty: Civic Secularism in Canada JF Critical research on religion VO 3 IS 1 SP 41 OP 56 A1 Klassen, Pamela E. 1967- LA English PB Sage YR 2015 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/1662789300 AB To ask whether the postcolonial is postsecular demands asking for whom, where, and when? To that end, what follows is a reflection situated in two Canadian contexts, separated by time and place, but both connected to the 'colonial secular'. Engaged in the public deliberation and storytelling of civic secularism, through which political legitimacy is achieved through comparing religions, these two contexts are twenty-first century Québec and early-twentieth-century British Columbia. More specifically, I consider two moments in which the state (or its agents) exerted its authority in order to reshape bodily practice and stories of place: the debate over the 'secular charter' in Québec and the founding of the railway town of Prince Rupert on Tsimshian land. These acts of negotiation and law-making turned to religious forms of legitimation in a way that was at once ambivalent, comparative, and forgetful of the historical founding of the state's own power. That is, in forming their 'natural sovereignty' over others, states often forget that their claims to power are, in part, acts of pretending. K1 Christianity K1 Indigeneity K1 Quebec K1 Tsimshian K1 Colonialism K1 Sovereignty DO 10.1177/2050303215584230