The politics of postsecular religion : mourning secular futures

Author(s)

    • Abeysekara, Ananda

Bibliographic Information

The politics of postsecular religion : mourning secular futures

Ananda Abeysekara

(Insurrections : critical studies in religion, politics, and culture)

Columbia University Press, c2008

  • : cloth

Available at  / 2 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [279]-310) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Ananda Abeysekara contends that democracy, along with its cherished secular norms, is founded on the idea of a promise deferred to the future. Rooted in democracy's messianic promise is the belief that religious--political identity-such as Buddhist, Hindu, Sinhalese, Christian, Muslim, or Tamil--can be critiqued, neutralized, improved, and changed, even while remaining inseparable from the genocide of the past. This facile belief, he argues, is precisely what distracts us from challenging the violence inherent in postcolonial political sovereignty. At the same time, we cannot simply dismiss the democratic concept, since it permeates so deeply through our modernist, capitalist, and humanist selves. In The Politics of Postsecular Religion, Abeysekara invites us to reconsider our ethical-political legacies, to look at them not as problems, but as aporias, in the Derridean sense-that is, as contradictions or impasses incapable of resolution. Disciplinary theorizing in religion and politics, he argues, is unable to identify the aporias of our postcolonial modernity. The aporetic legacies, which are like specters that cannot be wished away, demand a new kind of thinking. It is this thinking that Abeysekara calls mourning and un-inheriting. Un-inheriting is a way of meditating on history that both avoids the simple binary of remembering and forgetting and provides an original perspective on heritage, memory, and time. Abeysekara situates aporias in the settings and cultures of the United States, France, England, Sri Lanka, India, and Tibet. In presenting concrete examples of religion in public life, he questions the task of refashioning the aporetic premises of liberalism and secularism. Through close readings of Nietzsche, Heidegger, Arendt, Derrida, Butler, and Agamben, as well as Foucault, Asad, Chakrabarty, Balibar, and Zizek, he offers readers a way to think about the futures of postsecular politics that is both dynamic and creative.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments 1. Thinking the Un-improvable, Thinking the Un-inheritable 2. Aporias of Secularism 3. Postcolonial Community or Democratic Responsibility? A Problem of Inheritance 4. Toward Mourning Political Sovereignty: A Politics "Between a No-Longer and a Not-Yet"? 5. Im-passable Limits of Fugitive Politics: Identity for and Against Itself 6. Active Forgetting of History, the "Im-possibility" of Justice 7. Politics of "Postsecular" Ethics, Futures of Anti-genealogy: Community Without Community? Notes Index

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Details

  • NCID
    BB15243878
  • ISBN
    • 9780231142908
  • LCCN
    2007045831
  • Country Code
    us
  • Title Language Code
    eng
  • Text Language Code
    eng
  • Place of Publication
    New York
  • Pages/Volumes
    xvi, 324 p.
  • Size
    24 cm
  • Classification
  • Subject Headings
  • Parent Bibliography ID
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