Synopses & Reviews
In the Vale of Tears brings to a culmination the project for a renewed and enlivened debate over the interaction between Marxism and religion. It does so by offering the author's own response to that tradition. It simultaneously draws upon the rich insights of a significant number of Western Marxists and strikes out on its own. Thus, it argues for the crucial role of political myth on the Left; explores the political ambivalence at the heart of Christianity; challenges the bent among many on the Left to favour the unexpected rupture of kairós as a key to revolution; is highly suspicious of the ideological and class alignments of ethics; offers a thorough reassessment of the role of festishism in the Marxist tradition; and broaches the question of death, unavoidable for any Marxist engagement with religion. While the book is the conclusion to the five-volume series, The Criticism of Heaven and Earth, it also stands alone as a distinct intervention in some burning issues of our time.
Synopsis
In the Criticism of Heaven and Earth series's final volume Roland Boer presents his own views on Marxism and Theology.
Synopsis
This volume brings to a culmination the project for a renewed and enlivened debate over the interaction between Marxism and religion. It does so by offering the author's own response to that tradition. While the book is the conclusion to a five-volume series it also stands alone as a distinct intervention in some burning issues of our time.
About the Author
Roland Boer is Professor of Liberal Arts at Renmin University of China (Beijing). He has published extensively on Marxism, theology, political theory and biblical criticism. His most recent works are
Criticism of Earth: On Marx, Engels and Theology (Haymarket 2013),
Nick Cave: A Study of Love, Death and Apocalypse (Equinox 2012),
The Earthy Nature of the Bible (Palgrave 2012), and
Lenin, Religion, and Theology (Palgrave 2013).