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An open letter to lurkers

Dear readers,

It seems clear to me that there are many more readers of this blog than commenters — both the blog stats and my experience of running into total strangers at conferences who know me from the blog speak to that reality. I would like to thank you for your readership and also encourage you to comment if you have something on-topic to say. We have a reputation for harshness, I know, and though I believe that reputation is severely exaggerated, I understand where it comes from. I also understand that some readers may find the comment policy intimidating and that the stated policy may actually have had the perverse effect of restraining valuable commenters while failing to affect the behavior of the type of people it is aimed at.

For first-time commenters, however, I would like to warn that there is a particular type of comment that is almost sure to get a negative reaction: namely, the kind of comment that aims to stand up for free speech in the face of our unjust censorship and intolerance. Read the rest of this entry »

On having never been done with fanaticism: Book Review of Alberto Toscano’s Fanaticism

Alberto Toscano’s recent Fanaticism: On the Uses of an Idea is the culmination of research into the philosophical uses of the idea of fanaticism throughout various political philosophies of history. It develops what could be thought of as a critical philosophy of religion, one that turns the usual modern constellation of politics and religion on its head by investigating the form this thought takes itself. The project is not merely critical though, but aims to explicate a kind of “emancipatory core” at the heart of fanaticism, one that suggests, for those who take the axiom of equality seriously, that think a better world is possible for everyone, we should be distrustful of those discourses of anti-totalitarianism that have mutated in our contemporary age into anti-Islamic discourses. Read the rest of this entry »

Two problems with Christian identity

A subcurrent of recent conversation here and elsewhere has been the question of Christian identity. I myself work within the Christian tradition, and not solely as an “internal critic” — as will be clear once my dissertation is published this fall, I do constructive work from within the tradition as well, and so Christian identity is something that I still in some sense claim. I am also cognizant of the fact that everyone has to have some point of identification or other and that a “view from nowhere” is impossible. Nevertheless, I think it is appropriate to outline two general problems that I have persistently found in the way people situate themselves in terms of their Christian identity, which I will discuss in terms of the two words “identity” and “Christian.”

Identity: Often one will find Christian identity put forward as a self-evident goal in itself. One should follow the tradition primarily because it’s tradition, for example, or follow a given structure of authority because it’s the most authentically Christian form of authority. I believe that members of all traditions should be able to give reasons for their loyalty to their tradition. In the modern West in particular, everyone has the option of disidentifying with their roots or (in the case of converts to Christianity) remaining in one’s irreligious state: why the reference to Christianity, then? What keeps you coming back? Why is Jesus, or Paul, or Augustine, or whoever an attractive figure to you? Obviously no one can completely account for their motives, etc., and at the end of the day, the answer is probably going to be “this is where life has taken me” — but too often, people claiming Christian identity will jump much too quickly to the fact that everyone has to have some identity (i.e., the postmodern “at least it’s an ethos” argument). This overdefensiveness is reminiscent of when a conversation partner jumps to accusing someone who disagrees with them too strongly of not being able to tolerate differing views, etc. — in both cases, the short circuit from questioning of one’s particular views to the idea of absolute intolerance springs from the sense that someone, by questioning too much or too insistently, is somehow trying to “deprive” one of one’s point of identiciation. It seems as though this is an inherent temptation of any identity whatsoever, but it might be especially bad among Christians, for reasons I will now discuss.

Christians: It seems to me that the feeling of being persecuted is almost inseparable from Christian identity — I know that I am guilty of indulging in a persecution complex, even though I hold Christian identity more loosely than others. The historical roots of this Christian persecution complex are obvious, but its continuation into eras where Christians are actually the most powerful group has been absolutely toxic. In particular, once Christians are in power, there is a tendency to view the very existence of any other power center or point of identification as persecution — the fake controversies over the use of the phrase “Happy Holidays,” though obviously mostly a media phenomenon, provide a particularly vivid illustration of this thought structure. In connection with this identity structure, I have very often encountered self-identified Christians who regard questions — even something like “what do you mean by that?” — as a kind of persecution, as though the very fact of having to provide reasons or explanation is an intolerable burden. Here the Christian persecution complex and the inherent structure of any “identity” work together to create an exaggerated defensiveness that is very difficult for many to get past and has brought more than one potentially interesting conversation to an end.

Now just to repeat, I think that identifying with the Christian tradition is a perfectly justifiable choice — I still do so to a large degree (probably more than most front-page contributors here), and I also think it’s justifiable to identify much more closely than I do. There is obviously much that is good, promising, or at least interesting in the Christian tradition, and much that is attractive about Christian forms of piety, and that’s even leaving aside the family connections and friendships that probably bind the majority of Christians to the tradition in the last analysis.

There are good and bad ways of carrying one’s Christian identity, however, and I believe that the historical legacy of Christianity’s persecution complex and of the general structure of identity claims combine to create at least one bad way that is distressingly common among laypeople and intellectual Christians alike. Perhaps if the theology blogosphere becomes more conscious of these temptations, fewer conversations will run aground in useless defensiveness.

CFP: Postmodernism, Culture, and Religion 4

Clayton Crockett has passed along to me the call for papers [PDF] for the next Postmodernism, Culture, and Religion conference at Syracuse. In addition to Caputo, the plenary speakers will be AUFS favorites Philip Goodchild and Catherine Malabou, and in a departure from previous years, the rest of the program is going to be a more traditional conference format with an open call for papers and concurrent sessions. Paper submissions are due December 15.

Thoughts on “Kingdom-World-Church”

Nate Kerr has co-written a piece with Halden Doerge and Ry Siggelkow on the missionary nature of the church. It is natural that Nate would return to this question since it was such a hang-up during the hugely disappointing discussion of his book on various theology blogs — the fetish for “the church” is strong among theology bloggers, and in many cases it seemed to actively impede the understanding of a book that many of those same bloggers claimed to love more than life itself.

In general, the position advanced in the piece is what one would expect Nate to advance — a Barthian “insubstantial” ecclesiology, where the church exists for the salvation of the world rather than the world being saved through incorporation into the church as a substantial entity. I think of the Barthian church (and here one could also draw a connection to Dorothee Soelle) as a kind of avant-garde of humanity that is waiting in joyful hope for the day when it will cease to exist as such and simply be dissolved into the redeemed world, and in my forthcoming book Politics of Redemption I wind up putting forward a similar view of the Christian community.

There are plenty of responses to Nate that berate him for having an insufficiently strong ecclesiology, and those of you who are bored at work might find them to be a good way to kill an hour or two. (Executive summary: Nate needs a stronger ecclesiology.) I’d like to ask a few questions from another direction, centered on Nate’s key concept: “mission.” Read the rest of this entry »

Politics of Redemption: Endorsement from Catherine Keller

The publisher just sent me the following endorsement:

‘An indispensable contribution to the thorny theory of atonement. Hip to the feminist critique, inflected by the postmodern return to political theology, and steeped in the depths and potentialities of the doctrinal tradition, Kotsko’s relational ontology for the doctrine of redemption offers a lucid and erudite resource for a wide spectrum of Christian theology.’ – Catherine Keller, Professor of Constructive Theology, Drew University. Author of Face of the Deep and On the Mystery.

The book remains available for preorder through either Continuum or Amazon (UK).

Some reflections on 2 Maccabees

In comments to a recent post of mine on works righteousness and Judaism in the letters of Paul, Bruce Rosenstock called attention to the broader apocalyptic significance of Paul’s mission to the Gentiles, which is a kind of subplot in God’s plan for Israel. As we discussed the significance of the cross in that apocalyptic vision — which I have tended to understand in terms of showing the Roman Empire to be illegitimate — Bruce suggested that I look at 2 Maccabees. I reread it this afternoon, and now I’d like to offer some provisional thoughts on it, in the hopes of getting others to read it and getting a broader conversation started.

Read the rest of this entry »

Awkwardness now available for pre-order

Awkwardness Cover

My long-awaited magnum opus on the philosophy of awkwardness is now available for pre-order on Amazon, both .com and .co.uk. It’s cheap at $12.95, and if you pre-order, Amazon will only charge you the lowest price that the book reaches between now and the release date. You literally cannot lose. UPDATE: Or you could order for a much cheaper price from Book Depository! Thanks, Sarah.

Promotional material below the fold: Read the rest of this entry »

APS on Bergson and Grey Ecology in London and Some Links to Conference Audio

There is audio up from two recent events hosted by the philosophy department at the University of Dundee. The Real Objects/Material Subjects keynotes have been posted at Daily Humiliation and the latest Spinoza Research Network conference, “Spinoza and Texts”, is also up at the SRN website. Of particular interest to me was Nick Nesbitt’s paper, though I wasn’t sure how to take his discussion of “universalism” in relation to Spinoza his linking of Spinoza to the Jacobin’s and the Caribbean Enlightenment struggles was really interesting. Plus, if you’re a little tired of Jonathan Israel having a free pass simply because his books are so massive, it is nice to hear someone arguing with his reading of Spinoza and the reception of his thought (for those who don’t know, Israel denounces the Jacobins as counter to the Radical Enlightenment).

Also, a bit of self promotion, I will be speaking in London on July 7th at an Apple event organized by Kester Brewin and Nic Hughes. I’ll be giving a presentation entitled “Is the City a Machine for the Making of Gods?: Grey Ecology between Heidegger’s God and Bergson’s Mystic”. I gave them the following description, which I’m sure states things too starkly, but it’s supposed to sound sexy… we can work out the nuance during the pillow talk stage of the presentation.

In a discussion on technology and the acceleration of technological society, the German philosopher Martin Heidegger famously remarked that, “Only a god can save us now.” Heidegger’s philosophy of “poetically dwelling on the earth” has been taken up by many environmental thinkers, and even where he is not explicitly cited we can see traces of the same kind of thinking, a thinking that pits the technological against the earth, that claims only a god, something transcendent to technology, can save us now. In the wake of what we have done to the earth such a pessimistic picture may seem warranted, and ever more so now as we can not even use our technology to plug a pipe in the middle of the ocean. However, a different picture emerges in the work of the French philosopher Henri Bergson, one that suggests there is an intimate connection between “the mechanical and the mystical”. Examining Bergson’s philosophy this talk will suggest that we, rather than eschewing technology, the only way for us to continue to dwell on the earth, poetically or not, is to put the city at the heart of our ecological thinking. Instead of waiting for a god, we must recognize that the biosphere is nothing but a machine for the making of gods.

The event take place at The Betsey Trotwood, 56 Farringdon Road, London EC1R 3BL (map here). The evening runs from around 7:30, with content from 8.

Politics of Redemption cover

I just received the cover art for The Politics of Redemption: The Social Logic of Salvation, the published version of my dissertation, and I think it looks great:

BERJAYA

Thanks to all those who suggested images. Please also note that the book is available for preorder through either Continuum or Amazon (UK). It is set to be released October 10 in the UK and December 9 in the US. (With any luck, the former release date means there will be copies at AAR.)