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title | author | status | type | citation | tag | subjects | comments | file | date | publishdate | doi |
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Re-Enchanting Political Theology | Jeremy H. Kidwell | Published | published | “Re-Enchanting Political Theology” in <em>Religions</em>, vol. 10, iss. 10, Sep 2019 | enchantment, activism, political theology | enchantment, activism, political theology | no | religions-10-00550.pdf | 2019-09-26 | 2019-09-26 | 10.3390/rel10100550 |
For this Special Issue which confronts the ways in which the question of pluralism represents both haunting and promise within modern political theology, I explore the presence of pluralism in the context of the environmental crisis and religious responses to issues such as climate change. Following Jason Ā. Josephson-Storm, I suggest that models of disenchantment are misleading—to quote Latour, “we have never been modern.” In engagement with a range of neo-vitalist scholars of enchantment including Rosi Braidotti, Karen Barad, Isabelle Stengers, Jane Bennett and William Connolly, I explore the possibility of a kind of critical-theory cosmopolitics around the concept of “enchantment” as a possible site for multi-religious political theology collaborations and argue that this is a promising post-secular frame for the establishment of cosmopolitical collaborations across quite profound kinds of difference.