ABSTRACT

This title was first published in 2001: Debate about the reality of God risks becoming an arid stalemate. An unbridgeable gulf seems to be fixed between realists, arguing that God exists independently of our language and beliefs, and anti-realists for whom God-language functions to express human spiritual ideals, with no reference to a reality external to the faith of the believer. Soren Kierkegaard has been enlisted as an ally by both sides of this debate. Kierkegaard, Language and the Reality of God presents a new approach, exploring the dynamic nature of Kierkegaard's texts and the way they undermine neat divisions between realism and anti-realism, objectivity and subjectivity. Showing that Kierkegaard's understanding of language is crucial to his practice of communication, and his account of the paradoxes inherent in religious discourse, Shakespeare argues that Kierkegaard advances a form of 'ethical realism' in which the otherness of God is met in the making of liberating signs. Not only are new perspectives opened on Kierkegaard's texts, but his own contribution to ongoing debates is affirmed in its vital, creative and challenging significance.

chapter 1|27 pages

Kierkegaard and the question of language

chapter 2|28 pages

In search of the perfect language

chapter 3|30 pages

A Kierkegaardian theory of language?

chapter 4|24 pages

The seduction of language

chapter 5|29 pages

Significant silences

chapter 6|41 pages

Kierkegaard’s ethical realism

chapter 7|41 pages

The analogy of communication

chapter 8|19 pages

The passion of language