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El. knyga: Contemporary Democracy and the Sacred: Rights, Religion and Ideology

(Stockholm University, Sweden)

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Debates on the impact of religious traditions upon secular politics have raged throughout the last century and continue today. Exposing the ambiguity of secularity in political life, Jon Wittrock investigates the contemporary relevance of the scared beyond established religious communities and within wider civic society. In the context of globalization, characterized by the spread of capitalist commodification and new technologies of transportation and communication, determining the legitimacy of democratic nation-states is particularly urgent.

Questioning ontological challenges to democracy, this book confronts the public narratives, symbols and rituals of the political domain. It analyses modern scholarship on the impact of eschatological figures of thought on government and political ideologies, what hopes there are for universal rights or justice, and the “public worship” of contemporary democracies.

Bridging the analytical and continental sides of the philosophical divide, this book draws upon conceptual analysis as well as phenomenology and deconstruction. It advocates neither a left- nor a right-wing political approach, but seeks to outline what political secularization could and should mean.

Recenzijos

Jon Wittrock reminds us of a topology of the exceptional within the everyday life of liberal democracies: rituals, symbols, luminous experiences, and ancient religious legacies are at play in contemporary issues such as the clash between nationalism and human rights. Wittrocks well-balanced, erudite inquiry invites us to imagine how future communities may unite individual autonomy with sacred meaning. -- Richard Polt, Professor of Philosophy, Xavier University, USA

Daugiau informacijos

Provocatively assesses the relevance of religious traditions on secular politics in liberal democracies.
Preface vi
1 Democracy, Authenticity, Critique
1(38)
1.1 Religion and politics: Variations on a theme
1(7)
1.2 Power, authenticity, and democracy
8(14)
1.3 Secularization and the sacred: Possible buildings
22(17)
2 Sacred Boundaries and Ethical Closure
39(36)
2.1 Constitutive boundaries and sacralization
39(17)
2.2 Meaningful autonomy over time
56(19)
3 Axial Echoes in Global Space
75(32)
3.1 Public worship beyond the state?
75(14)
3.2 The state beyond public worship?
89(18)
4 Back to Burgenland?
107(38)
4.1 Toward a topology of the exceptional
107(21)
4.2 Ethos, spiritual decompression, and fatal politics
128(17)
Notes 145(19)
References 164(14)
Index 178
Jon Wittrock is Senior Lecturer at Södertörn University and Stockholm University, Sweden.