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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Matthew Scherer (George Mason University, Virginia)Publisher: Cambridge University Press Imprint: Cambridge University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.30cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.340kg ISBN: 9781107579439ISBN 10: 1107579430 Pages: 252 Publication Date: 15 October 2015 Audience: Professional and scholarly , College/higher education , Professional & Vocational , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviews'A brilliant contribution to the study of secularity, offering a new perspective on what has become a tired debate about political-religious separation. In inviting readers to rethink secularism as a 'religious' conversion - as rooted in the past and yet ruptured from it - Matthew Scherer has written a thought-provoking book of great originality. Beyond Church and State is essential reading for anyone who wishes to engage in serious public discussion on the topic.' Talal Asad, City University of New York, and author of Formations of the Secular 'This important book insightfully and fruitfully rethinks both political theology and political theory by developing two generative ideas. The first idea is that the figure of 'conversion' is best understood not as a movement from one fixed identity to another but as a process of change in the 'crystalline structure' of life ... The second idea is that 'secularism' is best understood not as a concept naming a clear and solid distinction between 'religion' and 'politics' but as a figure denoting a process of conversion ... To reconceive both the trope of conversion and the meaning of secularism as a concept, Scherer offers illuminating readings of Augustine Bergson and Cavell, on the one hand, and of Locke and Rawls on the other ... These readings are original, provocative, and compelling. They yield an incredibly suggestive intervention into contemporary debates. Few scholars approach political theology so creatively.' George Shulman, New York University 'The past twenty-five years have witnessed an explosion of studies undermining philosophical and historical analyses that posit fixed distinctions between church and state resulting in a wholly secular 'public reason' ... Scherer provides exciting and original reasons for this skepticism about secularity ... Summing up: recommended.' E. J. Eisenach, Choice 'This original book contributes to the debate about secularism as an ongoing process that delimits both religious and political life ... [It] is an important book marked by profound creativity. Scholars working on secularism in all its disguises should welcome it as an important and imaginative contribution to the ongoing debate about the relationship between religion and politics in a world of deep pluralism.' Lars Tonder, Perspectives on Politics 'A brilliant contribution to the study of secularity, offering a new perspective on what has become a tired debate about political-religious separation. In inviting readers to rethink secularism as a 'religious' conversion - as rooted in the past and yet ruptured from it - Matthew Scherer has written a thought-provoking book of great originality. Beyond Church and State is essential reading for anyone who wishes to engage in serious public discussion on the topic.' Talal Asad, City University of New York, and author of Formations of the Secular 'This important book insightfully and fruitfully rethinks both political theology and political theory by developing two generative ideas. The first idea is that the figure of 'conversion' is best understood not as a movement from one fixed identity to another but as a process of change in the 'crystalline structure' of life ... The second idea is that 'secularism' is best understood not as a concept naming a clear and solid distinction between 'religion' and 'politics' but as a figure denoting a process of conversion ... To reconceive both the trope of conversion and the meaning of secularism as a concept, Scherer offers illuminating readings of Augustine Bergson and Cavell, on the one hand, and of Locke and Rawls on the other ... These readings are original, provocative, and compelling. They yield an incredibly suggestive intervention into contemporary debates. Few scholars approach political theology so creatively.' George Shulman, New York University 'The past twenty-five years have witnessed an explosion of studies undermining philosophical and historical analyses that posit fixed distinctions between church and state resulting in a wholly secular 'public reason' ... Scherer provides exciting and original reasons for this skepticism about secularity ... Summing up: recommended.' E. J. Eisenach, Choice 'This original book contributes to the debate about secularism as an ongoing process that delimits both religious and political life ... [It] is an important book marked by profound creativity. Scholars working on secularism in all its disguises should welcome it as an important and imaginative contribution to the ongoing debate about the relationship between religion and politics in a world of deep pluralism.' Lars Tonder, Perspectives on Politics Author InformationMatthew Scherer is Assistant Professor of Government and Politics at George Mason University. 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