ABSTRACT
Despite the ever-expanding body of Deleuzian scholarship, single volume has explored the religious dimensions of Delueze's writing. Now, Mary Bryden has assembled a team of international scholars to do just that. Their essays illustrate the ways in which Deleuzian thought is antithetical to religious debate, as well as the ways in which it contributes to those debates.
This volume will be invaluable for researchers, teachers and students of theology, philosophy, critical theory, cultural studies and literary criticism as well as to students of French who read Deleuze's work in its original language.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part |2 pages
Part I Judgement and betrayal
chapter 3|9 pages
Embodied anti-theology: the body without organs and the judgement of God
part |2 pages
Part II Spirituality and mysticism
chapter 5|11 pages
The Tibetan Book of the Dead: Deleuze and the positivity of the second light
part |2 pages
Part III Literature and religion
part |2 pages
Part IV Beyond theology