Geroulanos_Religion and Politics From Aeschylus to Derrida SYLLABUS

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    Political Theology: Religion and Politics from Aeschylus to Derrida

    Morse Academic Program Course: Conversations with the WestSilver 206 / Tuesday-Thursday 4:55-6:10 (plus recitations)Professor: Stefanos Geroulanos, Department of History

    TA/TAs: Matt Watkins / Tom Fleischman

    Course DescriptionWhy do we believe that the past two centuries brought forth a process of secularization? Is politicsalways religious? Is religion ever apolitical? How have philosophers and theologians thought thecivic and its relation to the divine? In what way have they linked monotheism and religiousexperience to sovereignty and violence? Do we live in a post-secular time? In what way can we callreligion modern? How has secular modernity re-thought its religious past?

    Following from the recent resurgence of discussions of religions role in the public sphere,the aim of this course is to provide undergraduates with an overview of links between politics,literature, and theology since Classical Greece. We will read some of the major texts that address thepolitics of religion and the religious ground of political questions (including Aeschylus, St.Paul,

    Augustine, Shakespeare, Pascal, Kant, Marx, Weber, Schmitt, Levinas, Derrida). Overarching themesthat will be addressed at different times in the course include: the reconfiguration and modernexperience of the religious past; questions of violence and sovereignty; the limitations of atheisthumanism; and the force and role of ethics amidst religious ambivalence.

    RequirementsThe course is structured around two lectures and one recitation per week. Generally, the Tuesdaylecture concerns the background, central concepts, and overall significance of the thinker or textunder consideration, while the Thursday lecture will involve close reading of the text at hand. Oneabsence is fine, but further absences will adversely affect your grade. Everyabsence from a recitationwill count against your grade. You are expected to write short response papers and post them on the

    discussion section of blackboard by 5pm the evening before your recitation; each of these responsepapers should consist of three questions, each of them about a paragraph-long. You are alsoexpected to write two 3-page midterms, due on October 8 and November 17 respectively. A 6-pagefinal paper will be due on December 8, and there will be a final exam, as organized by the MAPoffice, on December 22. Questions for all three papers will be handed out a week in advance by theinstructors.

    Recitations: Fleischman: Monday 8:00-9:15 & 9:30-10:45Watkins: Friday 8:00-9:15 & 9:30-10:45

    Office Hours

    All three of us will hold office hours for you to make use as you see fitto be able to discuss thematerial with us one on one when you wish to, to discuss the midterm and final papers, andespecially should you feel you are having problems with the class.

    Geroulanos Tue. 1-3, Thurs. 1-2 53 Wash. Square South, #419 [email protected] Thurs. 14:45-16:45 53 Wash. Square South, 5W [email protected] Thurs. 14:45-16:45 53 Wash. Square South, 5W [email protected]

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    Week-by-Week Breakdown1. Introduction: Course of the Course Sept. 82. Definitions of Political Theology, Secularization, etc Sept. 10

    Talal Asad, The Construction of Religion as an Anthropological Category, inGenealogies of Religion(on blackboard)

    Jos Casanova, Public Religions Revisited in de Vries, Religion: Beyond a Concept (onblackboard)3. Tragedy and Religion in Classical Greece Sept. 15

    Aeschylus,Agamemnon and The Libation Bearers4. Tragedy and Religion in Classical Greece Sept. 17

    Aeschylus, The Eumenides5. Saint Paul Sept. 22

    Epistle to the RomansEpistle to the Galatians

    6. Saint Paul Redux Sept. 24Epistle to the Romans (ctd.)First Epistle to the Corinthians

    7. Stoicism (and Romes Sacred Man) Sept. 29Marcus Aurelius, The Meditations, selectionsAgamben, Homo Sacer, 71-74, 81-90.

    8. Augustine Oct. 1Augustine, Confessions, selections.

    9. Augustine Reloaded Oct. 6Augustine, Confessions, selections.

    10.The Passage from Late Medieval to Early Modern Europe Oct. 8William Shakespeare, Richard the Second

    11.Shakespeare Oct. 13Shakespeare, Richard the Second

    Guest Lecture, Nicole Jerr (Johns Hopkins University)12.Pascal: God and Man Oct. 15

    Pascal, Penses, short selections13.Spinoza and Miracles Oct. 20

    Benedict de Spinoza, Theologico-Political Treatise: preface, 1,2,4,614.Spinoza on the State Oct. 22

    Spinoza, Theologico-Political Treatise: 12, 14, 16, 17, 19, 2015.Rousseau Oct. 27

    Jean-Jacques Rousseau, On the Social Contract16.Kant and Reason Oct. 29

    Immanuel Kant, Religion Within the Limits of Mere Reason, selection

    17.Kant, part II Nov. 3Kant, Religion Within the Limits of Mere Reason, selection

    18.Atheism and the Question of Rights Nov. 5Declaration of the Rights of Man (1793)Karl Marx, On the Jewish Question

    19.Nietzsche Nov. 10Friedrich Nietzsche, The Anti-Christ

    20.Modern Political Theology I Nov. 12Weber, The Protestant Ethic & the Spirit of Capitalism: authors intro, chs.2,3,4A-B.

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    21.Modern Political Theology II Nov. 17Weber, The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism, ch.5.Carl Schmitt, Political Theology, 1-15.

    22.Modern Political Theology III Nov. 19Schmitt, Political Theology, 16-52.

    23.What do we talk about when we talk about the Other: Emmanuel Levinas Nov. 24Emmanuel Levinas, A Religion for Adults in Difficult Freedom, 11-24

    Levinas, Interview, in Hent de Vries, ed. Religion: Beyond a Concept24.Ethics and the Other Dec.1

    Levinas, Ethics and the Face in Totality and Infinity, 194-219.25.Deconstruction, Politics and Religion Dec.3

    Jacques Derrida, Rogues, selections.26.Rogues, Democracies, and the Reason of the Strongest Dec.8

    Jacques Derrida, Rogues, selections27.A Politics of Life Itself Dec.10

    Agamben, Homo Sacer, 1-29, 136-180.28.Conclusion Dec.15

    Grade BreakdownMidterm Paper 1 (due Oct. 8) : 10%Midterm Paper 2 (due Nov.17) : 15%Final Paper (due Dec. 10) : 20%In-Class Participation Grade : 20%Response Papers : 15%Final Exam : 20%

    Books to purchase.Aeschylus, The Oresteia (Penguin Classics)

    Giorgio Agamben, Homo Sacer (Stanford Univ. Press)Augustine, Confessions (Oxford University Press 2009 edition)Derrida, Rogues (Stanford University Press)Kant, Religion within the Boundaries of Mere Reason (Cambridge University Press 1999 edition)Nietzsche, Twilight of the Idols and The Anti-Christ (Penguin)Schmitt, Political Theology(University of Minnessota Press)Shakespeare, Richard the Second(New Cambridge Shakespeare Series)Weber, The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism, trans. Talcott Parsons (Dover 2003)

    and also (just ordered): Spinoza, Theologico-Political Treateise(Hachette)