Through an in-depth, critical analysis of Jacques Derrida’s later writings,
Beyond the Secular examines the contemporary nexus between religion and politics. Reconnecting these writings to his early works, Andrea Cassatella explores distinctive topics that are thematically linked by the theological-political problematic and theoretically informed by Derrida’s relational approach to language, time, religion and politics. The result is a critical investigation into under-examined assumptions of modern secular discourse that questions its binary logics and illuminates such discourse’s exclusionary character by tracing its roots in racialized understandings about language, epistemology, politics and religion that travel worldwide through global processes of assimilatory translation. By exposing the discriminatory hierarchies that the Western-Christian, sexualized, and racialized presuppositions of secular discourse keep producing and maintaining, Cassatella ultimately sheds light on the deep entanglements of secularism with the legacy of race and colonialism.
Table des matières
Acknowledgments
List of Abbreviations
Introduction
1. The Politics of Language and Translation
2. The Time of Political Thought
3. The Secular as Theological-Political
4. Democracy beyond Secularism?
5. Islam, Religion, and Democracy
Notes
Bibliography
Index
A propos de l’auteur
Andrea Cassatella is Senior Research Fellow at the Makerere Institute of Social Research at Makerere University in Uganda.