The neighbor : three inquiries in political theology
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The neighbor : three inquiries in political theology
(Religion and postmodernism)
University of Chicago Press, 2005
- : pbk
- : cloth
Available at / 8 libraries
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National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies Library (GRIPS Library)
: cloth316.2||Z401022910
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Note
Includes bibliographical references
Contents of Works
- Toward a political theology of the neighbor / Kenneth Reinhard
- Miracles happen : Benjamin, Rosenzweig, Freud, and the matter of the neighbor / Eric L. Santner
- Neighbors and other monsters : a plea for ethical violence / Slavoj Žižek
Description and Table of Contents
Description
In "Civilization and Its Discontents", Freud made abundantly clear what he thought about the biblical injunction, first articulated in "Leviticus 19:18" and then elaborated in Christian teachings, to love one's neighbor as oneself. "Let us adopt a naive attitude towards it," he proposed, "as though we were hearing it for the first time; we shall be unable then to suppress a feeling of surprise and bewilderment." After the horrors of World War II, the Holocaust, Stalinism, and Yugoslavia, "Leviticus 19:18" seems even less conceivable - but all the more urgent now - than Freud imagined. In "The Neighbor", three of the most significant intellectuals working in psychoanalysis and critical theory collaborate to show how this problem of neighbor-love opens questions that are fundamental to ethical inquiry and that suggest a new theological configuration of political theory. Their three extended essays explore today's central historical problem: the persistence of the theological in the political.
In "Towards a Political Theology of the Neighbor," Kenneth Reinhard supplements Carl Schmitt's political theology of the enemy and friend with a political theology of the neighbor based in psychoanalysis. In "Miracles Happen," Eric L Santner extends the book's exploration of neighbor-love through a bracing reassessment of Benjamin and Rosenzweig. And in an impassioned plea for ethical violence, Slavoj Zizek's "Neighbors and Other Monsters" reconsiders the idea of excess to rehabilitate a positive sense of the inhuman and challenge the influence of Levinas on contemporary ethical thought. A rich and suggestive account of the interplay between love and hate, self and other, personal and political, "The Neighbor" will prove to be a touchstone across the humanities and a crucial text for understanding the persistence of political theology in secular modernity.
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