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167Introduction: Immanence, Genealogy, DelegitimationIn Kirill Chepurin & Alex Dubilet (eds.), Nothing Absolute: German Idealism and the Question of Political Theology, Fordham University Press. pp. 1-34. 2021.This Introduction surveys "political theology" as an interdisciplinary site of inquiry, explicating its contemporary stakes and its connection to the movement of thought known as German Idealism.
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135(Non-)Human Identity and Radical Immanence: On Man-in-Person in François Laruelle's Non-PhilosophyIn Rocco Gangle & Julius Greve (eds.), Superpositions: Laruelle and the Humanities, Rowman & Littlefield International. pp. 31-45. 2017.n/a
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166An Immanence without the WorldQui Parle 1 (30). 2021.This essay proposes to rethink the conceptual associations that bind immanence to the secular and oppose it to (divine) transcendence. It asks: What if immanence is divorced from the conceptual opposition between the world and its openings to (divine) other(s), between enclosure and the trace of a transcendent outside? What might arise if immanence is severed from its link with secularity, if it ceases to be merely another conceptual support in secularism’s metaphysical armature? To pursue these…Read more
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322On the General Secular Contradiction: Secularization, Christianity, and Political TheologyIn Kirill Chepurin & Alex Dubilet (eds.), Nothing Absolute: German Idealism and the Question of Political Theology, Fordham University Press. pp. 240-255. 2021.Dubilet’s contribution turns to Marx’s “On the Jewish Question” in order to diagnose the collusive interplay between mediation and sovereignty as modes of transcendence that, together, prevent real immanence from irrupting. It does so by recovering the logic of “the general secular contradiction”—the division between the state and civil society that materializes and secularizes the structure of diremption originally articulated in theological form, as the opposition between heaven and earth. In …Read more
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199The Void of Thought and the Ambivalence of History: Chaadaev, Bakunin, and FedorovIn Panayiota Vassilopoulou & Daniel Whistler (eds.), Thought: A Philosophical History, Routledge. pp. 293-306. 2021.This paper cuts across three nineteenth-century Russian thinkers—Pyotr Chaadaev, Mikhail Bakunin and Nikolai Fedorov—to reconstruct a speculative trajectory that seeks to think an ungrounding and delegitimation of the (Christian-modern) world and its logics of violence, domination, and exclusion. In Chaadaev, Russia becomes a territory of nothingness—an absolute exception from history, tradition, and memory, without attachment or relation to world history. Ultimately, Chaadaev affirms this atopi…Read more
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