Gil Anidjar

Gil Anidjar is a professor in the department of religion at Columbia University. He is the author of ‘Our Place in al-Andalus': Kabbalah, Philosophy, Literature in Arab Jewish Letters (Stanford 2002) and The Jew, the Arab: A History of the Enemy (Stanford 2003). He has also edited Jacques Derrida's Acts of Religion (Routledge 2002). His latest book, Semites: Race, Religion, Literature (Stanford 2007), has just been published. His 2006 Critical Inquiry article on “Secularism” was one of four articles discussed at a recent SSRC colloquium on the Varieties of Secularism.

Posts by Gil Anidjar:

Friday, February 15th, 2008

Equal opportunity criticism (affirmative faction)

Heidegger did not need to point out (but he did) that God occupies a hegemonic place as the figure of transcendence that characterizes the Christian and post-Christian tradition (let us not rush too quickly to operate our own secularizing machines, global experts on world-religions that we are, to claim that other “traditions” equally partake of this particular character). But – and here is some more outbidding – God is not transcendent enough. In order to be a critical secularist, one would have to demonstrate a more unyielding antagonism, take a more radical stance (or agonizing distance), and install oneself in a more transcendent position vis-à-vis the object of one’s critique. What object? More often than not “religion” and better yet “religions.” But not only religion, of course.

Read the rest of Equal opportunity criticism (affirmative faction).
Wednesday, December 26th, 2007

A review in three parts

stillborn11.jpg“The world of today is torn asunder by a great dispute; and not only a dispute, but a ruthless battle for world domination. Many people still refuse to believe that there are only two sides, that the only choice lies between absolute conformity to the one system or absolute conformity to the other.” What Czeslaw Milosz in The Captive Mind was calling “a great dispute,” Mark Lilla calls “The Great Separation.” With this phrase, The Stillborn God presents itself, like its predecessor, as an account of the world, “our world, the world created by the intellectual rebellion against political theology.”

Read the rest of A review in three parts.

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