Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- Preliminary remarks
- 1 Culture as the transfiguration of religious thought
- 2 The religious effects of culture: nationalism
- 3 The religious effects of culture: Orientalism
- 4 The religious effects of culture: imperialism
- 5 The responsibilities of the secular critic
- 6 Marx, Said, and the Jewish question
- Concluding remarks: religion, secularism, and pragmatic naturalism
- Appendix A Whose exodus, which interpretation?
- Appendix B An exchange of letters between Michael Walzer and Edward Said
- Notes
- Select bibliography
- Index of names
1 - Culture as the transfiguration of religious thought
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- Preliminary remarks
- 1 Culture as the transfiguration of religious thought
- 2 The religious effects of culture: nationalism
- 3 The religious effects of culture: Orientalism
- 4 The religious effects of culture: imperialism
- 5 The responsibilities of the secular critic
- 6 Marx, Said, and the Jewish question
- Concluding remarks: religion, secularism, and pragmatic naturalism
- Appendix A Whose exodus, which interpretation?
- Appendix B An exchange of letters between Michael Walzer and Edward Said
- Notes
- Select bibliography
- Index of names
Summary
ARNOLD'S GOSPEL OF CULTURE
Said's work, as exemplified by Culture and Imperialism, is affiliated with an English-language tradition of cultural thought that extends backward through Raymond Williams' Culture and Society to Matthew Arnold's Culture and Anarchy. Matthew Arnold was a man caught between two worlds: the world of traditional Christian belief and the world of modern scientific reason, one dead, the other powerless to be born. In a world where national identity (increasingly racialized) had displaced religion as the center of value and the highest object of loyalty, Arnold was a proponent of cultural criticism as the Aufhebung (negation, preservation, and transformation) of religious thought. Through the mediations of T. S. Eliot and the New Critics, in whose work religious themes are prominent, Said appropriates and transfigures aspects of the Arnoldian cultural idea while rejecting others. He joins Arnold in praise of high culture as “the best that has been thought and said,” but cannot celebrate culture insofar as it is transfigured religion. Instead, he joins Marx in opposing a wide array of cultural fetishes. If Arnold construes culture as the transfiguration (Aufhebung) of religious thought, then Said construes the critique of culture – that is, the critique of transfigured religion – as the premise of all criticism.
Arnold's cultural critique simultaneously negates theological dogma, both popular and philosophical, preserves Christianity's core (its moral truth and existential efficacy), and transforms Christianity from an offense to modernity's scientific spirit to a deferential but skeptical accomplice.
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- Information
- Edward Said and the Religious Effects of Culture , pp. 17 - 39Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2000