Taking its cue from the renewed interest in theology among Marxist and politically radical philosophers or thinkers, this study inquires into the reasons for this interest in theology focusing on the British literary theorist Terry Eagleton and the Slovenian philosopher and psychoanalyst Slavoj }i~ek, as two contemporary prominent Marxist thinkers.Introduction Aim and Structure Marxism and Theology How to Read Eagleton and }i~ek Eagleton and the Sublunar Sublime }i~ek and the Trauma of Faith Ideology as Idolatry or Vice Versa Ideology Critique Beyond the Postmodern The Embodied Self The Moderately Rational Nature of Human Beings Looking Awry Ideology as Doctrine, Ritual, and Belief Ideology and the Real The Continuing Need for a Critique of Ideology The Need for Faith The Creed According to Eagleton Faith, Reason, and Engagement The Adventures of Spirit The Importance of Being Born Again Catholic Thomism and Hegelian Protestantism God, Evil, and Freedom Aquinas and The Void of God Freedom After Nihilism The Reason for Evil Schelling, God and Evil The Abandonment of God Against Idolatry: On Not Quite Being Opposites An Arrested Dialogue Against the Ethics of the Real: Eagleton on }i~ek Against the Return to the Symbolic: }i~ek on Eagleton On Neighbourly Love An Anatomy of Hope Eschatology Revolution Communism Hope The (Re)turn to Theology Revisited
This book is the best treatment we have of two towering public intellectuals Eagleton an Zizek. These two powerful and profound voices are rendered even more relevant by Ola Sigurdson. - Cornel West, professor, Center for African American Studies, Princeton University, USA
Sigurdson offers a close reading of Eagleton's and i ek's Marxist philosophies and their respective theological heritage. The fascinating disclosure of Eagleton's Catholic and i ek's Protestant influences gives rise to a reflection on the structural affinities between philosophy and theology and on their shared concern for hulÓ$