Political Demonology: The Logic of Evil in Contemporary Literature and Theology

Political Demonology: The Logic of Evil in Contemporary Literature and Theology

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This conference brings philosophers of religion, political theorists and literary scholars together to frame approaches to the problem of political evil–a project one might call ‘political demonology’–for our contemporary political and cultural crisis. What or who is the political enemy? What is political evil or sin? If we are living in the age of ‘the complete triumph of the individual’ (Gilles Chatelet), then the status of ‘individuality,’ ‘subjectivity,’ and ‘soul’ must be attended to within this context. But if individuality is coming to some kind of end (post-modern, post-capitalist, post-material, or otherwise), what moral-political regime is, or should be, appearing on the horizon? And what, then, is the meaning, place, and aesthetic of evil as a political phenomenon? Would the transformation of the individual mean liberation, oblivion, or even new forms of violence? And what is the role of statehood or the social? Through this interdisciplinary dialogue we seek to reformulate our own definitions, even as various contemporary crises violently reformulate them for us.

Recent Episodes

  • Shakespeare and Machiavellian Politics of Violence, Closing Keynote

    8 years ago
  • The pessimistic anthropology of liberalism vs. the Good

    8 years ago
  • Going Beyond Evil in Theory, Politics and Practice

    8 years ago
  • ‘“Political Theology” or “Occasional Decisionism”? On the Formal Character of Carl Schmitt’s Political Theology’

    8 years ago
  • The Dialectics of Individualism and Totalitarianism in Charles de Koninck, David Foster Wallace, and Michel Houellebecq

    8 years ago
  • Modernist Myths of the Fall

    8 years ago
  • The Two Deaths of Osama Bin Laden –Demonic Repetition in Contemporary Culture

    8 years ago
  • The Nightmare that Dreams: The Soul and Nihilism - Opening Keynote

    8 years ago