•  36
    Grave Matters
    with Dietrich Christian Lammerts
    Reaktion Books. 2002.
    The journey to the cemetery is always solitary even when I am with people who are closest to me. In the graveyard, the we is dispersed and the I stripped bare." In Grave Matters, Taylor's ghosts become our own.
  •  124
    Orthodox-y (-) Mending (review)
    Thought: Fordham University Quarterly 61 (1): 162-171. 1986.
  •  66
    Non-Negative Negative Atheology"How to Avoid Speaking: Denials" (review)
    with Jacques Derrida, Sanford Budick, and Wolfgang Iser
    Diacritics 20 (4): 2. 1990.
  •  77
    Journeys to Selfhood: Hegel and Kierkegaard
    Fordham University Press. 2022.
    Taylor reconsiders the two philosophers based on the notion that all modern philosophy lies between the poles of their thought. He has added a new introduction to the 1980 original edition.
  •  150
    This book deals with a central problem in the writings of Soren Kierkegaard, the themes of time and the self as developed in the pseudonymous writings. Arguing that a most effective way to grasp the unity of Kierkegaard's dialectic of the stages of existence is to focus on the dramatic presentation of time and the self that appears at each stage, Mark C. Taylor pursues these themes from the viewpoints of theology, philosophy, psychology, and related areas of study. The author works from the orig…Read more
  •  140
    Imagologies: Media Philosophy
    with Esa Saarinen
    Routledge. 1994.
    _Imagologies: Media Philosophy_ is no ordinary book. Provocative, irritating and stimulating, this is a work to be engaged, questioned and pondered. As the web of telecommunications technology spreads across the globe, the site of economic development, social change, and political struggle shifts to the realm of media and communications. In this remarkable book, Mark Taylor and Esa Saarinen challenge readers to rethink politics, economics, education, religion, architecture, and even thinking its…Read more
  •  49
    Altarity
    University Of Chicago Press. 1987.
    Readers familiar with Mark C. Taylor's previous writing will immediately recognize _Altarity_ as a remarkable synthetic project. This work combines the analytic depth and detail of Taylor's earlier studies of Kierkegaard and Hegel with the philosophical and theological scope of his highly acclaimed _Erring_. In _Altarity_, Taylor develops a genealogy of otherness and difference that is based on the principle of creative juxtaposition. Rather than relying on a historical or chronological survey o…Read more