|
Product Description
Conventional wisdom holds that attempts to combine religion and politics will produce unlimited violence. Concepts such as jihad, crusade, and sacrifice need to be rooted out, the story goes, for the sake of more bounded and secular understandings of violence. Ted Smith upends this dominant view, drawing on Walter Benjamin, Giorgio Agamben, and others to trace the ways that seemingly secular politics produce their own forms of violence without limit. He brings this argument to life—and digs deep into the American political imagination—through a string of surprising reflections on John Brown, the nineteenth-century abolitionist who took up arms against the state in the name of a higher law. Smith argues that the key to limiting violence is not its separation from religion, but its connection to richer and more critical modes of religious reflection. Weird John Brown develops a negative political theology that challenges both the ways we remember American history and the ways we think about the nature, meaning, and exercise of violence.
Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought
- Living Gently in a Violent World: The Prophetic Witness of Weakness
- The Children of Light and the Children of Darkness: A Vindication of Democracy and a Critique of Its Traditional Defense
- Race: A Theological Account
- The Christian Imagination: Theology and the Origins of Race
- John Brown (Modern Library Classics)
- Voices from American Prisons: Faith, Education and Healing
- Resurrecting Wounds: Living in the Afterlife of Trauma
- Mourning the Unborn Dead: A Buddhist Ritual Comes to America
- Jesus and the Disinherited
- Stand Your Ground; Black Bodies and the Justice of God
*If this is not the "Weird John Brown: Divine Violence and the Limits of Ethics (Encountering Traditions)" product you were looking for, you can check the other results by clicking this link. Details were last updated on Oct 27, 2024 03:11 +08.