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Liturgical Power Between Economic And Political Theology Nicholas Heron

  • SKU: BELL-9998498
Liturgical Power Between Economic And Political Theology Nicholas Heron
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Liturgical Power Between Economic And Political Theology Nicholas Heron instant download after payment.

Publisher: Modern Language Initiative
File Extension: PDF
File size: 1.54 MB
Pages: 217
Author: Nicholas Heron
ISBN: 9780823278695, 0823278697
Language: English
Year: 2017

Product desciption

Liturgical Power Between Economic And Political Theology Nicholas Heron by Nicholas Heron 9780823278695, 0823278697 instant download after payment.

Is Christianity exclusively a religious phenomenon, which must separate itself from all things political, or do its concepts actually underpin secular politics? To this question, which animated the twentieth-century debate on political theology, Liturgical Power advances a third alternative. Christian anti-politics, Heron contends, entails its own distinct conception of politics. Yet this politics, he argues, assumes the form of what today we call “administration,” but which the ancients termed “economics.” The book’s principal aim is thus genealogical: it seeks to understand our current conception of government in light of an important but rarely acknowledged transformation in the idea of politics brought about by Christianity.
This transformation in the idea of politics precipitates in turn a concurrent shift in the organization of power; an organization whose determining principle, Heron contends, is liturgy―understood in the broad sense as “public service.” Whereas until now only liturgy’s acclamatory dimension has made the concept available for political theory, Heron positions it more broadly as a technique of governance. What Christianity has bequeathed to political thought and forms, he argues, is thus a paradoxical technology of power that is grounded uniquely in service.
About the Author
Nicholas Heron is Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities, University of Queensland. He is the translator of Giorgio Agamben’s Stasis: Civil War as a Political Paradigm.

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