ABSTRACT

The book intervenes into the contemporary debate on religion, politics, and economy, focusing on the field of formation which emerges as these seemingly autonomous spheres encounter one another.

Empirically, it concentrates on examples from literature, theatre, and cinema as well as a case study of the recent revolts in Turkey where a ‘moderate’ Islamic government is in power. Theoretically, its focus is on the contemporary ‘return’ of religion in the horizon of the critique of religion, seeking to articulate an affirmative politics that can re-evaluate the value of dominant values in religious governance and governance of religion.

chapter |11 pages

Introduction

Profanation versus sacralization

chapter |17 pages

Religion as superstition

chapter |12 pages

Excursus I

Voltaire's Mahomet as despot

chapter |13 pages

Excursus II

The Devils, possession, and truth-telling

chapter |15 pages

Excursus III

The emancipated city: notes on the Gezi revolts

chapter |13 pages

Excursus IV

The map, the territory, and the impossibility of painting a priest

chapter |10 pages

Instead of conclusion

From four religions to four truth procedures