Unnatural theology : religion, art and media after the death of God
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Unnatural theology : religion, art and media after the death of God
(Bloomsbury political theologies)
Bloomsbury Academic, 2019
- : hb
Available at 3 libraries
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [176]-187) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The failure of secular modernity to deliver on its promise of progress and enlightenment leaves a void that religion is rushing to fill. Yet what kind of religious thinking and doing can be adequate to our posthuman condition? And how can we avoid either embracing religious fundamentalism and fantasy or remaining mired in hopeless atheistic nihilism?
In Unnatural Theology Charlie Gere provides ways of thinking about the possibilities of religion and theology in the context of our highly technologized postmodernity. Taking its cue from a wide range of thinkers, from John Ruskin and Alfred North Whitehead, to Jacques Derrida, Judith Butler, Giorgio Agamben, Simon Critchley, Catherine Keller, Bruno Latour, and Timothy Morton, and artists such as Marcel Duchamp and Richard Hamilton, and films including The Incredible Shrinking Man, the book seeks the remnants of theology and religion in the realms of technology and media, and also art, as the basis of potential new religious thinking.
Through an interdisciplinary engagement with these thinkers and artists it develops the notion of an unnatural theology as the basis of a new kind of religious thought that does not insult our intelligence.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1. An Unnatural Theology for the Anthropocene
2. The Silence of God
3. Corpus Mystical Anarchism
4. Ruskin's Haunted Nature
5. Photography in the Time that Remains
6. Whore Text
7. Pop Eschatology
8. Looking Down from Ingleborough
9. The Incredible Shrinking Human
10. Of Clouds and the Cloud
11. God: In Black and White
Glossary
Bibliography
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