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Preface
Acknowledgements
1. Professing Islam in a Post-Secular Society
Introduction
On the Contemporary Possibility of Witnessing and Professing
The Post-Secular Society
What does it mean to Profess Islam?
Witnessing In Islam: on the Tradition of Radical Praxis
New Religion as Return of the Old
Witnessing in the Time of War
‘Perfected Religion’: A Problematic Conception
Fear of Philosophical Blaspheme
2. Adversity in Post-Secular Europe
The Dialectics of Martyrdom: Death as Witnessing and Professing
Witnessing Against Islam: The Case of Theo van Gogh
Je ne suis pas Charlie et je ne suis pas avec les terrorists
3. Finding a Common Language
13th Century Witnessing: Saint Francis of Assisi and Sultan Malik
al-Kamil
Different Francis, Same Mission: Witnessing with and for
Muslims
Translation Proviso: Can We Witness and Confess in the Same
Language?
Cognitive-Instrumental Reason, Moral-Practical Reason and
Aesthetic-Expressive Reason in Religion
Translation Dangers
Secular Entrenchment
4. Witnessing and Confessing in Prophetic and Positive
Religions
Affirmation and Negativity: Marx
Affirmation and Negativity: Lenin
Affirmation and Negativity: Horkheimer and Adorno
Confronting the Post-Secular Condition
Prophetic and Priestly Religion
5. After Auschwitz: Islam in Europe
Violence and the Post-Secular
Violence and the State
Freud’s Unbehagen mit Marx
Witnessing and Professing in a Nietzschian Age of Nihilism
Witnessing and Professing After Auschwitz: Theodor Adorno’s
Poetics
History and Metaphysics after Auschwitz
Ethics after Auschwitz
Witnessing the Messianic: The Case of the Martyr Walter
Benjamin
A Place for Theology
Messiah, Messianic and the Historian
Benjamin’s Critique of Progress: Witnessing History as
Barbarity
6. Post-Secularity and its Discontents: The Barbaric Revolt against
Barbarism
Absolutivity
Authoritarian Absolutes, Heteronomy, and the Islamic State in Iraq
and Syria
Humanistic Absolutes
ISIS: Same Problem, Different Manifestations
American and Euro-Jihadis
Hegel, War and Individualism
ISIS and Western Alienation
Internationalism
Seeking Heaven at the Barrel of a Gun
Material Poverty or Poverty of Being?
Genealogy of Terror
Symbolic Message
Reign of Terror: Bourgeois and Muslim
The Perverse Dialectic of Apology
Hypocritical Apologetics and the Recovery of the Prophetic
7. The Globalized Post-Secular Society and the Future of Islam
From the West to the Rest
Theocracy as a Response to the Globalized Post-Secular Society
Post-Secular Solidarity: A Proposal for an Intra-religious
Constitutionalism
Ecumenisms and Inter-Religious Constitution Building: Modern
Slavery
Conclusion
References
Index
Features in Critical Sociology
Promotion targeting progressive Sociological Journals
Publicity and promotion in conjunction with the author's speaking
engagements
Dustin J. Byrd, Ph.D. (2016), Michigan State University, is an Assistant Professor of Humanities at Olivet College in Michigan. He has published monographs, edited volumes and many articles on both Islam and the Frankfurt School’s Critical Theory. His latest book, Malcolm X: From Political Eschatology to Religious Revolutionary, was co-edited with Seyed Javad Miri (Haymarket, 2017).
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