Cantitate/Preț
Produs

Bliss Against the World: Schelling, Theodicy, and the Crisis of Modernity: AAR Reflection and Theory in the Study of Religion

Autor Kirill Chepurin
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 3 feb 2025
The concept of bliss, in its connotations of beatitude and salvation, may seem of little relevance to so-called secular modernity. Bliss Against the World argues otherwise by advancing a novel framework of the entanglement between modernity, Christianity, and bliss through the thought of German Idealist and Romantic philosopher Friedrich Schelling (1775--1854). In Schelling's concept of bliss (Seligkeit), the idea of salvation from the world mutates into a burning concern with the negativity of the modern world, and with the way modernity inherits the Christian promise of a non-alienated future that never arrives. Throughout his thinking, Schelling grapples with the question of theodicy: Can this negative world be justified? And what would it mean to be free of the world--to enact bliss right now--when the idea of otherworldly salvation increasingly loses its conceptual relevance? This leads Schelling to conceptualize bliss as what refuses or apocalyptically annihilates this world and its divisions and burdens. Bliss Against the World reinterprets Schelling's philosophical trajectory from the 1790s to the 1840s, showing his metaphysics, philosophy of religion, and natural philosophy to be underwritten by the apocalyptic tension between bliss and theodicy. It argues that this tension is located likewise at the heart of modernity and reconstructs the Schellingian genealogy of the modern age as intensifying what may be termed the general Christian contradiction. It also focuses on Schelling's anxiety about the possibility of universal history in the dark and de-centered universe and critiques his Romantic construction of humanity and his geo-racial theodicy of history--a theodicy that refracts and legitimates the violent logics of post-1492 modernity, including European colonialism, racialization, and transatlantic slavery.Bliss Against the World thus theorizes bliss not only with, but also against Schelling, who emerges from this book as a key thinker of modernity, and of the Christian-modern trajectory as a path to salvation in the shadow of whose failure we continue to live.
Citește tot Restrânge

Din seria AAR Reflection and Theory in the Study of Religion

Preț: 72908 lei

Preț vechi: 94686 lei
-23% Nou

Puncte Express: 1094

Preț estimativ în valută:
13953 14536$ 11601£

Carte disponibilă

Livrare economică 20 ianuarie-03 februarie 25

Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76

Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780197788899
ISBN-10: 0197788890
Pagini: 400
Ilustrații: 3
Dimensiuni: 166 x 238 x 32 mm
Greutate: 0.77 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Seria AAR Reflection and Theory in the Study of Religion

Locul publicării:New York, United States

Recenzii

Bliss Against the World will radically transform not just Schelling scholarship, but equally our very idea of modernity. Each page is pregnant with insights that upset our preconceptions about the constitution of the modern worldand, taken together, they announce Chepurin as one of the most interesting voices currently writing on German Idealism and Romanticism, secularity and Christianity, and the ways in which we try to justify this world we inhabit.
Thanks to his commanding knowledge of Schellings work and his sophisticated understanding of contemporary debates around coloniality, racialization, and political theology, Chepurin shows that Schelling offers novel resources for addressing todays most pressing theoretical questions. After a half-century fixation on Hegel, Chepurin demonstrates how generative it would be for critical thought to be re-centered around Schelling.

Notă biografică

Kirill Chepurin is a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Maimonides Centre for Advanced Studies, University of Hamburg, Germany. He is a scholar of Idealism and Romanticism, philosophy of religion, and critical theory and the co-editor of Nothing Absolute: German Idealism and the Question of Political Theology.