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Taking detours toward the Aufhebung of Religion: Roland Boer on the attachment between Marxism and political myth

Version 2 2024-06-17, 22:49
Version 1 2016-08-01, 00:00
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-17, 22:49 authored by R Jeffs
This article responds to Roland Boer’s Marxism and Theology (2007–13) that offers a unique contribution to understanding the current impasse in revolutionary Left politics and illustrates the importance of the numerous references to theology in Marxist literature. In this response, I focus on Boer's argument of Marxism and Judaeo-Christian theology occupying a similar contested space with respect to their uses of “political myth.” I argue that the key to Boer’s critical project is a two-pronged approach: “materializing” theology and “theologizing” historical materialism. For this critical endeavor to make inroads, it relies not just on the ambivalence of political myth, but also that myths are essential to Marxist theories of emancipation, as well as to Marx’s notion of “the Aufhebung of Religion.” I focus on two figures: Ernst Bloch as a Marxist who emphasizes myth’s emancipatory qualities; and Theodor Adorno as wary of myth while adhering to the theological motif of the bilderverbot. From this analysis, we can begin to see how much Boer’s project depends on a wager on political myth itself.

History

Related Materials

Location

London, Eng.

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article, C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2016, The Author(s)

Journal

Critical research on religion

Volume

4

Pagination

190-198

ISSN

2050-3032

eISSN

2050-3040

Issue

2

Publisher

SAGE Publications