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Religion in Public - Locke's Political Theology (Hardcover, New)
Loot Price: R2,431
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Religion in Public - Locke's Political Theology (Hardcover, New)
Series: Cultural Memory in the Present
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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John Locke's theory of toleration is generally seen as advocating
the privatization of religion. This interpretation has become
conventional wisdom: secularization is widely understood as
entailing the privatization of religion, and the separation of
religion from power. This book turns that conventional wisdom on
its head and argues that Locke secularizes religion, that is, makes
it worldly, public, and political. In the name of diverse
citizenship, Locke reconstructs religion as persuasion, speech, and
fashion. He insists on a consensus that human rights are sacred
insofar as humans are the creatures, and thus, the property of God.
Drawing on a range of sources beyond Locke's own writings,
Pritchard portrays the secular not as religion's separation from
power, but rather as its affiliation with subtler, and sometimes
insidious, forms of power. As a result, she captures the range of
anxieties and conflicts attending religion's secularization:
denunciations of promiscuous bodies freed from patriarchal
religious and political formations, correlations between secular
religion and colonialist education and conversion efforts, and more
recently, condemnations of the coercive and injurious force of
unrestricted religious speech.
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