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Zizek and Theology

by Adam Kotsko

Book title

Slavoj Žižek’s work on Christianity often overwhelms students due to its complexity and usual concepts. This book will assist students in getting to grips with Žižek’s earlier and more recent works with an eye toward what brings him to an explicit engagement with Christianity.

  • Imprint: T & T Clark International
  • Series: Philosophy and Theology
  • Pub. date: 26 Jul 2008
  • ISBN: 9780567032454
192 Pages, paperback World rights $24.95 Add to my Catalogue Add to my basket

Description

Slavoj Žižek has been called an “academic rock star.” As public visibility of the Slovenian philosopher and psychoanalyst increases, so too does the depth of his engagement with Christian theology. Žižek’s recent work includes extended treatments of key Christian thinkers from Paul, Pascal, and Kierkegaard to G. K. Chesterton and C. S. Lewis, while Christology and other theological themes have provided crucial points of reference. Žižek has even said that “to become a true dialectical materialist, one should go through the Christian experience.”

But Žižek’s work on Christianity often overwhelms students of theology. To be sure, Žižek’s style of argumentation is unusual and his concepts are complex. But the more basic problem is that his work on Christianity is a further development of a broader intellectual project established in many volumes produced in the course of the 1990s. This book will bring students of theology up to speed on this broader intellectual project, with an eye toward what brings Žižek to an explicit engagement with Christianity and how both his earlier and more recent works are relevant for theological reflection.

Table of Contents

Introduction: A Materialist Theology? 
The Approach of This Book 
Hegel
Lacan 
Marx

Chapter 1: Ideology Critique 
Ideology in Practice 
The Challenge of Cynicism 
Ideology and the big Other
The Stumbling Block of the Real
Keeping Enjoyment at Bay 
Liberal Democracy and Nationalism 

Chapter 2: Subjectivity and Ethics 
The Real as Sexual Difference 
The “Vanishing Mediator”
Fantasy and the Big Other
Diagnosing Ethics 
The Cure 

Chapter 3: The Christian Experience 
Prefiguring the Theological Turn 
A Politics of Truth 
The Reign of Perversion
Job and Judaism 
Cross and Collective 
Love Beyond the Law 

Chapter 4: Dialectical Materialism, or The Philosophy of Freedom 
What is Dialectical Materialism? 
Self-Consciousness as Short Circuit 
The Anti-Adaptive Animal
Theological Materialism 
The Politics of Refusal, or, Waiting on the Holy Spirit 

Chapter 5: Theological Responses 
An Inventory of Theological Themes 
Responses from Radical Orthodoxy 
Other Theological Responses 
Žižek’s “Method of Correlation” 
Žižek and Tradition 
Religionless Christianity and the Death of God 



Author(s)

Adam Kotsko,

Adam Kotsko is a teaching assistant at Chicago Theological Seminary. His current research interests include 20th century European philosophy and early Christian thought.

Reviews

"a useful introduction to Žižek’s theological writing – and it will be especially useful for those who’ve been wanting to read Žižek, but don’t know where to start"
Dr Benjamin Myers, Faith and Theology Blog

,

"this remains the best introduction to Zizek and theology currentlt available"
"theologians sarching for handles by which to grapple with Zizek are indebted to Kotsko for his work"
Religious studies Review, June 2009

Myle Werntz, Baylor University,

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