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![]() iThe Religious/i offers landmark texts from Kierkegaard, Heidegger, Levinas, Derrida, and Irigaray, excerpts from the famous debate between Jean-Luc Marion and Dominique Janicaud, and ten original selections, some of which include coverage of feminist theology.Contributors.pAcknowledgements.pIntroduction: Who Comes After the God of Metaphysics (John D. Caputo)b.pPart I: Landmarks (/bSoeren Kierkegaard).p1. The Moment: Selections from iThe Concept of Anxiety/i.p2. The Wholly Other: Selections from iPhilosophical Fragments/i.p3. Faith: Selections from iPractice in Christianity/i (Martin Heidegger).p4. Phenomenology and Theology.p5. The Onto-theo-logical Constitution of Metaphysics (Emmanuel Lévinas).p6. Diachrony and Representation (Jacques Derrida).p7. My Religion:: Selections from iCircumfession/i (Luce Irigaray).p8. Belief Itself. b.pPart II: Contemporary Essays./bp9. The Final Appeal of the Subject (Jean-Luc Marion).p10. Veerings from iThe Theological Turn of French Phenomenology/i (Dominique Janicaud).p11. The Experience of God (Kevin Hart).p12. Eschatology of the Possible God (Richard Kearney).p13. God is Underfoot: Pneumatology after Derrida (Mark I. Wallace).p14. Beyond Belief?: Sexual Difference and Religion after Ontotheology (Ellen T. Armour).p15. Barely by a Breath...: Irigaray on Rethinking Religion (Grace M. Jantzen).p16. Second Thoughts About Transcendence (Walter Lowe).p17. Materiality and Theoretical Reflection (Charles E. Winquist).p18. Divine Excess: The God Who Comes After (Merold Westphal).p19. Darkness and Silence: Evil and the Western Legacy (John Milbank).p20. Return to Laughter (Sharon Welch).pIndex.In this collection, the most innovative contemporary continental philosophers speak out about the ways in which religion must be rethought after the end of metaphysics. Can phenomenology in an age of the hyperreal provide an account of what cannot be s Read the entire article at A1 Books See also:
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