Michael Naas, Magdalena Sedmak, Michael Naas, et al.
Leiden
Brill | Schöningh
In the course of the research project "Revenge of the Sacred: Phenomenology and the Ends of Christianity", a group of scholars based at the University of Vienna attempts to understand a modern society that is seemingly no longer Christian, yet also not yet non-Christian. How does the citizen negotiate the ambiguities between the religious and the political in this ambivalent space that seems to be becoming increasingly "post-secular" in a way that is not necessarily "anti-secular?" We explore the core of these and other questions with contemporary scholars in a series of interviews entitled "What moves you? Human Rights, Hearts, Beliefs - and Beyond." This interview was conducted with the Derrida specialist, professor, and translator Michael Naas (De Paul University, IL, U.S.). It covers the topics of globalization, migration, hospitality, all in the context of human rights, secularism, and religion today. In the course of the research project "Revenge of the Sacred: Phenomenology and the Ends of Christianity", a group of scholars based at the University of Vienna attempts to understand a modern society that is seemingly no longer Christian, yet also not yet non-Christian. How does the citizen negotiate the ambiguities between the religious and the political in this ambivalent space that seems to be becoming increasingly "post-secular" in a way that is not necessarily "anti-secular?" We explore the core of these and other questions with contemporary scholars in a series of interviews entitled "What moves you? Human Rights, Hearts, Beliefs - and Beyond." This interview was conducted with the Derrida specialist, professor, and translator Michael Naas (De Paul University, IL, U.S.). It covers the topics of globalization, migration, hospitality, all in the context of human rights, secularism, and religion today. In the course of the research project "Revenge of the Sacred: Phenomenology and the Ends of Christianity", a group of scholars based at the University of Vienna attempts to understand a modern society that is seemingly no longer Christian, yet also not yet non-Christian. How does the citizen negotiate the ambiguities between the religious and the political in this ambivalent space that seems to be becoming increasingly "post-secular" in a way that is not necessarily "anti-secular?" We explore the core of these and other questions with contemporary scholars in a series of interviews entitled "What moves you? Human Rights, Hearts, Beliefs - and Beyond." This interview was conducted with the Derrida specialist, professor, and translator Michael Naas (De Paul University, IL, U.S.). It covers the topics of globalization, migration, hospitality, all in the context of human rights, secularism, and religion today. In the course of the research project "Revenge of the Sacred: Phenomenology and the Ends of Christianity", a group of scholars based at the University of Vienna attempts to understand a modern society that is seemingly no longer Christian, yet also not yet non-Christian. How does the citizen negotiate the ambiguities between the religious and the political in this ambivalent space that seems to be becoming increasingly "post-secular" in a way that is not necessarily "anti-secular?" We explore the core of these and other questions with contemporary scholars in a series of interviews entitled "What moves you? Human Rights, Hearts, Beliefs - and Beyond." This interview was conducted with the Derrida specialist, professor, and translator Michael Naas (De Paul University, IL, U.S.). It covers the topics of globalization, migration, hospitality, all in the context of human rights, secularism, and religion today.
2020
531-540
Interdisciplinary Journal for Religion and Transformation in Contemporary Society