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An Insurrectionist Manifesto

Four New Gospels for a Radical Politics
  • Ward Blanton , Clayton Crockett , Jeffrey Robbins and Noëlle Vahanian
  • With contributions by: Creston Davis
  • Afterword by: Catherine Keller
  • Preface by: Peter Rollins
Language: English
Published/Copyright: 2016
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About this book

A call for new forms of solidarity and spiritual practice.

Author / Editor information

Ward Blanton is a reader in biblical cultures and European thought at the University of Kent.

Clayton Crockett is professor and director of religious studies at the University of Central Arkansas.

Jeffrey W. Robbins is professor and chair of religion and philosophy at Lebanon Valley College.

Noelle Vahanian is professor of philosophy at Lebanon Valley College.

Reviews

Santiago Zabala, ICREA Research Professor of Philosophy at Pompeu Fabra University:
New concepts are very rare, but when philosophers manage to create them, everything changes. This manifesto thrust us into an 'insurrectionist' theology where Nietzsche's death of God, Zizek's ontology of the Real, and Malabou's plastic materiality come together to overcome those metaphysical frames that still condition our lives. Anyone interested in radical theology, philosophy, and politics in the 21st century must read this book carefully since he might find himself also to be an insurrectionist.

Mary-Jane Rubenstein, author of Worlds Without End: The Many Lives of the Multiverse:
In these unapologetic, interlocking essays, we find a radical theology that finally lives up to its name. Here theology tumbles kenotically, inexorably, into political economy, literature, climate science, postcoloniality, critical race theory, and nonequilibrium thermodynamics, forcing us to face the earth, sky, mortals, and gods as they are—and in all that they're not—and only then as they might yet be.

Kenneth Surin, Duke University:
Attempts to break the age-old grip of the transcendent on theological thought have multiplied in recent years. In this indispensable provocation to thought, these wonderfully intrepid and scholarly philosophers of religion have pushed the accompanying turn toward immanence in the direction of the political in all its hugely varied insurrectionist forms.

Mike Grimshaw, University of Canterbury:
Each gospel-like contribution to The Insurrectionist Manifesto can be read separately, but when they are read in tandem, a particular disturbing power is occasioned. I found myself stimulated and conceptually shaken in equal fashion. The call of these gospels has the potential to disturb the ground of our being. Those who hear it will be positively afflicted by a series of challenges that are exciting and demanding in equal measure.

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Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
April 12, 2016
eBook ISBN:
9780231541732
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
224
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