The Politics of Spirit 683b

ebook ∣ Phenomenology, Genealogy, Religion · SUNY series, Issues in the Study of Religion 3u2e2b

By Tim Murphy 1i5i4

cover image of The Politics of Spirit

Sign up to save your library 5u2t15

With an OverDrive , you can save your favorite libraries for at-a-glance information about availability. Find out more about OverDrive s.

   Not today

Find this title in Libby, the library reading app by OverDrive.

 Libby on the App Store  Libby on Google Play

Search for a digital library with this title 3t1nj

Title found at these libraries: 5x1614

Library Name Distance
Loading...

A critical look at the development of the phenomenological approach to the study of religion, revealing its evaluative and metaphysical concepts.

A penetrating critique of the dominant approach to the study of religion, The Politics of Spirit explores the historical and philosophical scaffolding of the phenomenology of religion. Although this approach purports to give a value-free, neutral description of religious data, it actually imposes a set of metaphysical and evaluative concepts on that data. A very harmful ethnocentrism has resulted, which plagues the academic study of religion to this day. Analysis of the history, core texts, and discursive structure of phenomenology of religion reveals how this ethnocentrism is embedded within its assumptions. Of particular interest is the revelation of the extent to which Hegel's ideas-over those of Husserl-contributed to the tenets that became standard in the study of religion.

Tim Murphy argues that the poststructuralist concept of genealogy, as derived from Nietzsche, can both describe religion better than the phenomenological approach and avoid the political pitfalls of ethnocentrism by replacing its core categories with the categories of difference, contingency, and otherness. Ultimately, Murphy argues that postmodern genealogy should replace phenomenology as the paradigm for understanding both religion and the study of religion.

The Politics of Spirit