Description

Book Synopsis

Chris Boesel invites readers into a Kierkegaardian style literary conceit, creating two pseudonymous voices—one philosophical and deconstructive, one theological and confessional—in order to stage an encounter between two commentaries on Kierkegaard's Fear and Trembling. On one level, the contest between the two commentaries demonstrates the extent to which an encounter between deconstruction and Kierkegaard has not taken place in the one place everyone thinks it has, in Derrida’s reading of Fear and Trembling in The Gift of Death. On a deeper level, Boesel argues that Derrida’s misreading of Fear and Trembling is both source and symptom of a wider problem: an apophatic blind spot in deconstructive engagements with Christian theology in philosophy of religion and postmodern theology. This blind spot erases the theological and ethical possibilities of what Boesel calls a Kierkegaardian confessional faith, possibilities rooted in a “deconstructive deconstructibility” that produces its own deconstructive-like effects. As a corrective to this blind spot, the pseudonymous encounter between deconstruction and Kierkegaard staged here shows how these effects do the very things heralded by self-proclaimed apophatic remedies of “confessional faith”: disrupt human mastery over God and neighbor while calling for concrete commitments to justice for the widow, orphan and stranger.



Trade Review

Deconstruction is justice. Or maybe not. In a provocative and yet witty book, Chris Boesel invites us to consider the problems with a deconstruction that doesn’t turn its critical lens upon its own progressivism. Offering Kierkegaardian Christianity as a constructive alternative, Boesel argues that we need an actual God defined by embodied relational love if we are to go beyond mere structural logics of alterity and begin to care for the widows, the orphans, and the strangers in our midst. No one is safe from this book. But we are all better because of it.

-- J. Aaron Simmons, Furman University

A compelling analysis and argument for the claims 1) that deconstruction is too formal to provide any warrant for the secular, left-wing politics of Derrida and many of his admirers, 2) that Derrida is a poor reader of Kierkegaard, and 3) that properly understood, deconstruction can help a confessional Christian theology with Kierkegaardian overtones to maintain a proper humility. The form of presentation makes the reading easy and fun.

-- Merold Westphal, Fordham University

Boesel has managed to write a book that is at once meticulous and light-hearted, both generous and uncompromising. It makes a strong case for the confessional Kierkegaard who makes so many philosophers twitchy, forcing what one might call a genuine decision about this notoriously slippery thinker. Whether the argument delights or offends you, it will challenge and impress you.

-- Mary-Jane Rubenstein, Wesleyan University

Table of Contents

Part One: Introductions, Devices, Contexts

1.Derrida, Kierkegaard and What Remains To Be Said

2.Deconstruction, Kierkegaardian Faith and Competing Commentaries on Fear and Trembling

3. A “Sustained Consideration of Religion”? The Professor’s Introduction to The Gift of Death

Part Two: Derrida Reads Patočka on Responsibility: The Impossibility of Responsibility

4.Responsibility and the Deconstructive Figure of the Secret

5.The Secret, the Figure of Death and the Impossibility of Responsibility

Part Three: Derrida Reads (and Does Not Read) Kierkegaard on Faith:

Abraham as Figure of the Impossibility of Responsibility

6.God is Silent /God Speaks!

7.Abraham’s Blind Unknowing/Divine Promise and Abraham’s Informed Expectation

8.Abraham Gives Up Isaac without Hope/Abraham Holds to Isaac in the Assurance of Faith: The Double Movement

9.A Constructive Theological Interlude: The Incognito of Faith, Baptism and the Substitutable Marks of the Christian Life

10.Abraham Has Nothing to Say/What Abraham Has to Say Cannot Be Understood

11.Abraham Is Everyone and Everyone Is God/The “Clearance Sale” and the “Vanishing Point”—Derrida Plays Hegel

Part Four: An Accidental Encounter

12.The Gift, Economy and Abraham’s Calculated Sacrifice of Calculation/Derrida’s Accidental Reading of Fear and Trembling

13.An Unconcluding Theological Postscript: The Deconstruction of Kierkegaardian Faith as a Limit of Deconstruction?

Appendix: Where Are They Now?

In Kierkegaard's Garden with the Poppy Blooms:

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    A Hardback by Chris Boesel

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      Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
      Publication Date: 27/07/2021
      ISBN13: 9781978706514, 978-1978706514
      ISBN10: 1978706510

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Chris Boesel invites readers into a Kierkegaardian style literary conceit, creating two pseudonymous voices—one philosophical and deconstructive, one theological and confessional—in order to stage an encounter between two commentaries on Kierkegaard's Fear and Trembling. On one level, the contest between the two commentaries demonstrates the extent to which an encounter between deconstruction and Kierkegaard has not taken place in the one place everyone thinks it has, in Derrida’s reading of Fear and Trembling in The Gift of Death. On a deeper level, Boesel argues that Derrida’s misreading of Fear and Trembling is both source and symptom of a wider problem: an apophatic blind spot in deconstructive engagements with Christian theology in philosophy of religion and postmodern theology. This blind spot erases the theological and ethical possibilities of what Boesel calls a Kierkegaardian confessional faith, possibilities rooted in a “deconstructive deconstructibility” that produces its own deconstructive-like effects. As a corrective to this blind spot, the pseudonymous encounter between deconstruction and Kierkegaard staged here shows how these effects do the very things heralded by self-proclaimed apophatic remedies of “confessional faith”: disrupt human mastery over God and neighbor while calling for concrete commitments to justice for the widow, orphan and stranger.



      Trade Review

      Deconstruction is justice. Or maybe not. In a provocative and yet witty book, Chris Boesel invites us to consider the problems with a deconstruction that doesn’t turn its critical lens upon its own progressivism. Offering Kierkegaardian Christianity as a constructive alternative, Boesel argues that we need an actual God defined by embodied relational love if we are to go beyond mere structural logics of alterity and begin to care for the widows, the orphans, and the strangers in our midst. No one is safe from this book. But we are all better because of it.

      -- J. Aaron Simmons, Furman University

      A compelling analysis and argument for the claims 1) that deconstruction is too formal to provide any warrant for the secular, left-wing politics of Derrida and many of his admirers, 2) that Derrida is a poor reader of Kierkegaard, and 3) that properly understood, deconstruction can help a confessional Christian theology with Kierkegaardian overtones to maintain a proper humility. The form of presentation makes the reading easy and fun.

      -- Merold Westphal, Fordham University

      Boesel has managed to write a book that is at once meticulous and light-hearted, both generous and uncompromising. It makes a strong case for the confessional Kierkegaard who makes so many philosophers twitchy, forcing what one might call a genuine decision about this notoriously slippery thinker. Whether the argument delights or offends you, it will challenge and impress you.

      -- Mary-Jane Rubenstein, Wesleyan University

      Table of Contents

      Part One: Introductions, Devices, Contexts

      1.Derrida, Kierkegaard and What Remains To Be Said

      2.Deconstruction, Kierkegaardian Faith and Competing Commentaries on Fear and Trembling

      3. A “Sustained Consideration of Religion”? The Professor’s Introduction to The Gift of Death

      Part Two: Derrida Reads Patočka on Responsibility: The Impossibility of Responsibility

      4.Responsibility and the Deconstructive Figure of the Secret

      5.The Secret, the Figure of Death and the Impossibility of Responsibility

      Part Three: Derrida Reads (and Does Not Read) Kierkegaard on Faith:

      Abraham as Figure of the Impossibility of Responsibility

      6.God is Silent /God Speaks!

      7.Abraham’s Blind Unknowing/Divine Promise and Abraham’s Informed Expectation

      8.Abraham Gives Up Isaac without Hope/Abraham Holds to Isaac in the Assurance of Faith: The Double Movement

      9.A Constructive Theological Interlude: The Incognito of Faith, Baptism and the Substitutable Marks of the Christian Life

      10.Abraham Has Nothing to Say/What Abraham Has to Say Cannot Be Understood

      11.Abraham Is Everyone and Everyone Is God/The “Clearance Sale” and the “Vanishing Point”—Derrida Plays Hegel

      Part Four: An Accidental Encounter

      12.The Gift, Economy and Abraham’s Calculated Sacrifice of Calculation/Derrida’s Accidental Reading of Fear and Trembling

      13.An Unconcluding Theological Postscript: The Deconstruction of Kierkegaardian Faith as a Limit of Deconstruction?

      Appendix: Where Are They Now?

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