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dc.contributor.authorChrulew, Matthew
dc.date.accessioned2017-01-30T15:20:43Z
dc.date.available2017-01-30T15:20:43Z
dc.date.created2016-02-08T19:30:16Z
dc.date.issued2015
dc.identifier.citationChrulew, M. 2015. Genealogies of the Secular, in Stanley, T. (ed), Religion after Secularization in Australia, pp. 139-158. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/45417
dc.identifier.doi10.1057/9781137551382_7
dc.description.abstract

A growing international debate has sought to problematize the secular: to demonstrate its imbrication with religion, particularly Christianity; to articulate or advance something called the postsecular, beyond the nihilism of modernity; and to identify where amid this upheaval lie the resources for critique. At stake are the potentialities of our religious inheritances and political futures. The questions of derivation and discontinuity that accompany the genealogical method are pivotal in the contemporary debate that asks how the secular derives from Christianity, whether in its discursive, governmental, colonial, or economic forms. Here, Michel Foucault’s account of the spread of modern arts of government is crucial. For Foucault, modern political forms of governmentality are best understood as emerging not through secularization but rather in-depth Christianization—as the proliferation of technologies of conduct formed in the ecclesiastical pastorate. In what follows, I will outline the key features of Foucault’s contribution to contemporary secularization theory, as well as its legacy in Talal Asad’s genealogy of the colonial dimensions of secular politics and subjectivity, as well as Giorgio Agamben’s recent work on the theological genealogy of economy.

dc.publisherPalgrave Macmillan
dc.titleGenealogies of the Secular
dc.typeBook Chapter
dcterms.source.startPage139
dcterms.source.endPage158
dcterms.source.titleReligion after Secularization in Australia
dcterms.source.isbn1137536896
dcterms.source.isbn9781137536891
dcterms.source.chapter10
curtin.departmentDepartment of Communication and Cultural Studies
curtin.accessStatusFulltext not available


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