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'Acts of Religion is a timely book precisely because it suggests that we are, perhaps always, coming late to religion. The essays compiled here show how questions of faith set demands upon reading that cannot be satisfied in easy ways. The writing here, taking place in various genres, in various modes of address, compel us to rethink fundamental issues of identity, relationality, displacement. To think and read religious questions in this way is not to decide an identity, but to articulate the distinctions among religions and to recognize how we are defined by an inescapable proximity with others, one that opens identity, time, and territory to critical reformulations. Anidjar's introduction is excellent, cautioning us to read well, patiently, and without the expectation that our usual categories will survive intact in the end.' - Judith Butler, University of California at Berkeley
'This important collection of essays traces the development of Derrida's long-standing interest in religion into a virtual obsession. In ways difficult to calculate Derrida has become one of the most provocative 'religious' thinkersof our time. Gil Anidjar's fine translation and remarkable introduction show not only the philosophical and theological importance but also the social, political and even economic implications of Derrida's reflections on religion.' - Mark C. Taylor, author of The Moment of Complexity: Emerging Network Culture and Grave Matters
'The most important publication in the area of deconstruction and theology this year ... indispensible reading for the many scholars working in this area.' - Critical and Cultural Theory
'Acts of Religion is a timely book precisely because it suggests that we are, perhaps always, coming late to religion. The essays compiled here show how questions of faith set demands upon reading that cannot be satisfied in easy ways. The writing here, taking place in various genres, in various modes of address, compel us to rethink fundamental issues of identity, relationality, displacement. To think and read religious questions in this way is not to decide an identity, but to articulate the distinctions among religions and to recognize how we are defined by an inescapable proximity with others, one that opens identity, time, and territory to critical reformulations. Anidjar's introduction is excellent, cautioning us to read well, patiently, and without the expectation that our usual categories will survive intact in the end.' - Judith Butler, University of California at Berkeley
'This important collection of essays traces the development of Derrida's long-standing interest in religion into a virtual obsession. In ways difficult to calculate Derrida has become one of the most provocative 'religious' thinkers of our time. Gil Anidjar's fine translation and remarkable introduction show not only the philosophical and theological importance but also the social, political and even economic implications of Derrida's reflections on religion.' - Mark C. Taylor, author of The Moment of Complexity: Emerging Network Culture and Grave Matters
'The most important publication in the area of deconstruction and theology this year ... indispensible reading for the many scholars working in this area.' - Critical and Cultural Theory