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What's New in Our Current ‘International Secularism’?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 February 2012

Extract

Nathaniel Berman's paper offers us a rich study of the interwar reflections about the intertwining between religion and nationalism, seen as ‘forces’ both dangerous and necessary, which should be ‘freed’ or ‘tamed’ in order to create a new political order. This theme is approached through its theorization by the French Collège de Sociologie and its non-academic philosophy of the sacred (mainly Bataille's transformation of the Durkheimian idea of a ‘left sacred’ and a ‘right sacred’), but also through the discourses and the practices of international law, by prominent lawyers, or through the way European nations dealt with the status of ‘minorities’ or with colonized people living under status of Protectorate. I much appreciate Berman's evocation of these various reflections and the way they ‘complicate’ (both as analysis and as symptoms) the problem of secularization as well as the question of legal internationalism. Let me develop these two points, before coming to some aspects of Berman's reflection that seem to me less convincing or more questionable.

Type
INTERNATIONAL LEGAL THEORY
Copyright
Copyright © Foundation of the Leiden Journal of International Law 2012

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References

1 Other recent works seem to go in the same direction: see E. Shakman Hurd, The Politics of Secularism in International Relations (2008); Balibar, E., ‘Sécularisme et cosmopolitisme: Héritages, controverses, perspectives’, (2011) 14 Raison publique 191228Google Scholar.

2 G. Agamben, State of Exception (first Italian edition 2003, American translation 2005).

3 H. Blumenberg, The Legitimacy of Modern Age (first German edition 1966, American translation 1985).

4 W. Fallers Sullivan, R. A. Yelle, and M. Taussig-Rubbo (eds.), After Secular Law (2011).

6 See the recent dialogue between T. Asad, W. Brown, J. Butler, and S. Mahmood, Is Critique Secular? (2009).