Pantheism is the idea that God and the world are identical-that the
creator, sustainer, destroyer, and transformer of all things is the
universe itself. From a monotheistic perspective, this notion is
irremediably heretical since it suggests divinity might be
material, mutable, and multiple. Since the excommunication of
Baruch Spinoza, Western thought has therefore demonized what it
calls pantheism, accusing it of incoherence, absurdity, and-with
striking regularity-monstrosity. In this book, Mary-Jane Rubenstein
investigates this perennial repugnance through a conceptual
genealogy of pantheisms. What makes pantheism "monstrous"-at once
repellent and seductive-is that it scrambles the raced and gendered
distinctions that Western philosophy and theology insist on drawing
between activity and passivity, spirit and matter, animacy and
inanimacy, and creator and created. By rejecting the fundamental
difference between God and world, pantheism threatens all the other
oppositions that stem from it: light versus darkness, male versus
female, and humans versus every other organism. If the panic over
pantheism has to do with a fear of crossed boundaries and
demolished hierarchies, then the question becomes what a
present-day pantheism might disrupt and what it might reconfigure.
Cobbling together heterogeneous sources-medieval heresies, their
pre- and anti-Socratic forebears, general relativity, quantum
mechanics, nonlinear biologies, multiverse and indigenous
cosmologies, ecofeminism, animal and vegetal studies, and new and
old materialisms-Rubenstein assembles possible pluralist
pantheisms. By mobilizing this monstrous mixture of unintentional
God-worlds, Pantheologies gives an old heresy the chance to renew
our thinking.
General
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!