Description
Contributors. Anthony Baker, Daniel M. Bell Jr., Phillip Blond, Simon Critchley, Conor Cunningham, Creston Davis, William Desmond, Hent de Vries, Terry Eagleton, Rocco Gangle, Philip Goodchild, Karl Hefty, Eleanor Kaufman, Tom McCarthy, John Milbank, Antonio Negri, Catherine Pickstock, Patrick Aaron Riches, Mary-Jane Rubenstein, Regina Mara Schwartz, Kenneth Surin, Graham Ward, Rowan Williams, Slavoj Zizek
A reassertion o fthe importance of theology to political action that goes beyond both liberal democratic theory and neoconservatism.
About the Author
Creston Davis is a doctoral candidate in philosophical theology at the University of Virginia.
John Milbank is a professor of religion, politics, and ethics at the University of Nottingham. His books include Being Reconciled: Ontology and Pardon and Theology and Social Theory: Beyond Secular Reason.
Slavoj Zizek is a senior researcher at the Institute for Social Studies in Ljubljana, Slovenia. He is the author of Tarrying with the Negative: Kant, Hegel, and the Critique of Ideology, editor of Cogito and the Unconscious: Kant, Hegel, and the Critique of Ideology, and coeditor of Perversion and the Social Relation and Gaze and Voice as Love Objects, all also published by Duke University Press.
Reviews
"Underlying all the very varied essays in this volume is a set of issues about how we understand human action. And what the essays have in common, I believe, is a conviction that the fundamental requirement of a politics worth the name is that we have an account of human action that decisively marks its distance from assumptions about action as the successful assertion of will. If there is no hinterland to human acting except the contest of private and momentary desire, meaningful action is successful action, an event in which a particular will has imprinted its agenda on the 'external' world. Or, in plainer terms, meaning is power . . . and any discourse of justice is illusory."--Rowan Williams, Archbishop of Canterbury, from the introduction
"Theology and the Political is a helpful book because it gathers in one volume a representative sample of very serious theologians. . . ." -- Stephen H. Webb * First Things *
"[A] collection of this caliber on such a timely subject is to be welcomed." -- D. W. Congdon * Princeton Theological Review *
"[A] patient reader will be rewarded with some intriguing perspectives and insights that take seriously the difficult challenge confronting political action in the context of global capitalism." -- Christopher Craig Brittain * Dalhousie Review *
"[T]hat there is no majority discourse in the book is to the credit of the editors for it has increased the depth and variance of the analyses presented, allowing the book to become more fully a 'debate.' Though this format often leads the reader to feel as if the book is somewhat schizophrenic, this is ultimately its greatest strength and precisely why it is worth reading." -- Anthony Paul Smith * Journal for Cultural and Religious Theory *
"The new debate referenced in this rich, lengthy, and important collection is a desperately urgent debate. . . . [T]he work itself functions as a symphony, building between and among chapters to orchestrate a complex and fruitful investigation of some of the most crucial theoretical issues we face in our contemporary world and includes some of the most influential contemporary philosophers and theologians working today." -- Clayton Crockett * Journal of the American Academy of Religion *
"This book is another 'deliberate kick against the tide of the times.'" -- Stephen Webb * Insights *
"This volume is . . . . a welcome and much-needed wake-up call- if not a call to arms, then no less radically because it is a scandal to the postmodern mind, at least a call to truth and its consequences." -- Jeffrey W. Robbins * Political Theology *
Book Information
ISBN 9780822334729
Author Creston Davis
Format Paperback
Page Count 496
Imprint Duke University Press
Publisher Duke University Press
Weight(grams) 689g