Criticism of Religion
On Marxism and Theology, II
Biographical note
Roland Boer, Ph.D. (1993) in Biblical Studies, McGill University, is Research Fellow at the University of Newcastle, Australia. He has published extensively in theology, Marxism, political theory, postcolonialism, cultural studies and literary theory. His most recent works are Criticism of Heaven (2007), Symposia (2007), Political Myth (2009) and Political Grace (2009).
Readership
All those interested in critical theory and philosophy, Marxism and religion, as well as biblical studies and theology.
Reviews
"All [...] of these essays are well worth reading. They embody the fruit of many years of reflection and show a most impressive command of a vast and heterogeneous literature. They are insightful, thought-provoking, and also original in the sense of revealing unexpected aspects of those under discussion. The style is sometimes a little arch, but the analysis is always substantial and the assessment judicious. No one reading Boer will come away without being better informed and wiser."
David McLellan, Marx and Philosophy Review of Books. Accessed 2 September 2010
URL: http://www.marxandphilosophy.org.uk/reviewofbooks/reviews/2010/182
David McLellan, Marx and Philosophy Review of Books. Accessed 2 September 2010
URL: http://www.marxandphilosophy.org.uk/reviewofbooks/reviews/2010/182
Table of contents
Preface
Introduction
1. The Paradoxes of Lucien Goldmann
The dialectic of grace
The Elect and the Damned
Wagering It all
In the world and yet not
Theory: the tight fi t of homology
Homology
Dialectics?
Is Pascal among the Marxists?
By way of conclusion: Marxism as a secular and anti-secular project
2. The Stumbling Block of Fredric Jameson
Supersession versus a dialectic of ideology and utopia
Sidestepping religion
Magic and fantasy
Feuerbach versus Marx
The politics of fantasy
Apocalyptic
By way of conclusion: towards a dialectic of religion
3. The Christian Communism of Rosa Luxemburg
Tactics
A Reformer’s zeal
Betraying the spirit
A little Church history
Anti-clericalism
Christian communism
Consumption versus production
Completing Christian communism
Freedom of conscience
4. The Enticements of Karl Kautsky
Text, history, context
The slipperiness of sacred texts
The Bible as a cultural product
Reconstructing economic history
Differentiation and slaves
Slaves and other modes of production
The sacred economy: prolegomena to a reconstruction
Transitions
Christian communism
Conclusion
5. The Forgetfulness of Julia Kristeva
Flushing out Marx
Monocausality, or, the taboo of the mother
Paul the Apostle, both ways
Other-than-human love
Crucifying the pathologies
Collectives
Conclusion
6. The Fables of Alain Badiou
Banishing the One
Theology and the Event
A generic procedure of religion?
Pascal’s miracle
Kierkegaard’s encounter
Paul’s fable
Conclusion: necessary fables
7. The Conundrums of Giorgio Agamben
The search for Paul
Christology, or the problem of Jesus Messiah
Faith, law and grace as placeholder of the void
Pre-law, or trying to make sense of Paul
Conclusion: relativising theology
8. The Self-Exorcism of Georg Lukács
A world abandoned by God
Leap-frogging Christianity
Autobiographical exorcism
Conclusion
9. The Bible and The Beekeeper’s Manual
An apparent absence?
Warm Marxism
Autobiography
Welshness
The working class
Conclusion: the vanishing mediator of the Baptist chapel
Conclusion
References
Index of Biblical References
General Index
Introduction
1. The Paradoxes of Lucien Goldmann
The dialectic of grace
The Elect and the Damned
Wagering It all
In the world and yet not
Theory: the tight fi t of homology
Homology
Dialectics?
Is Pascal among the Marxists?
By way of conclusion: Marxism as a secular and anti-secular project
2. The Stumbling Block of Fredric Jameson
Supersession versus a dialectic of ideology and utopia
Sidestepping religion
Magic and fantasy
Feuerbach versus Marx
The politics of fantasy
Apocalyptic
By way of conclusion: towards a dialectic of religion
3. The Christian Communism of Rosa Luxemburg
Tactics
A Reformer’s zeal
Betraying the spirit
A little Church history
Anti-clericalism
Christian communism
Consumption versus production
Completing Christian communism
Freedom of conscience
4. The Enticements of Karl Kautsky
Text, history, context
The slipperiness of sacred texts
The Bible as a cultural product
Reconstructing economic history
Differentiation and slaves
Slaves and other modes of production
The sacred economy: prolegomena to a reconstruction
Transitions
Christian communism
Conclusion
5. The Forgetfulness of Julia Kristeva
Flushing out Marx
Monocausality, or, the taboo of the mother
Paul the Apostle, both ways
Other-than-human love
Crucifying the pathologies
Collectives
Conclusion
6. The Fables of Alain Badiou
Banishing the One
Theology and the Event
A generic procedure of religion?
Pascal’s miracle
Kierkegaard’s encounter
Paul’s fable
Conclusion: necessary fables
7. The Conundrums of Giorgio Agamben
The search for Paul
Christology, or the problem of Jesus Messiah
Faith, law and grace as placeholder of the void
Pre-law, or trying to make sense of Paul
Conclusion: relativising theology
8. The Self-Exorcism of Georg Lukács
A world abandoned by God
Leap-frogging Christianity
Autobiographical exorcism
Conclusion
9. The Bible and The Beekeeper’s Manual
An apparent absence?
Warm Marxism
Autobiography
Welshness
The working class
Conclusion: the vanishing mediator of the Baptist chapel
Conclusion
References
Index of Biblical References
General Index
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Roland Boer, University of Newcastle, Australia
In the Vale of Tears offers the author's own detailed response to the long and rich tradition of Marxism and religion. It deals with the crucial issues of myth, political ambivalence, kairós, ethics, fetishism and death.
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