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Making the Heavens Speak

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Making the Heavens Speak
First edition
AuthorPeter Sloterdijk
Original titleDen Himmel zum Sprechen bringen
TranslatorRobert Hughes
CountryGermany
LanguageGerman
PublisherSuhrkamp Verlag
Publication date
26 October 2020
Published in English
December 2022
Pages352
ISBN978-3-518-42933-4

Making the Heavens Speak: Religion as Poetry (German: Den Himmel zum Sprechen bringen. Über Theopoesie, lit.'Making the Heavens Speak. On Theopoetics') is a 2020 book by the German philosopher Peter Sloterdijk.

Summary

The book analyzes religions from a perspective where they are viewed as literary products. Rejecting anti-religious positions such as that of Karl Marx, it examines the genre's stylistic devices, or "theopoetics".[1] Among the subjects it covers are the theatre of ancient Greece, the anti-mythological stance of Plato, ancient Egyptian polytheism, the theologian Karl Barth, Heinrich Joseph Dominicus Denzinger's Enchiridion Symbolorum, the universal claims of Islam, and the Book of Job.[2]

Publication

Suhrkamp Verlag published the book in Germany on 26 October 2020.[3] An English translation by Robert Hughes was published by Polity in December 2022.[4]

Reception

Stephan Sattler of Focus placed the book in a group of recent German books about the origins and history of "human understanding of the self and the world",[2] written by Hans Joas, Jan Assmann and Jürgen Habermas, which all draw from the latest decades of philological, historical and sociological research. Sattler wrote that each of Sloterdijk's chapters can be read as a standalone essay, and that "this disturbing book should not be missed".[2]

References

Citations

Sources

This page was last edited on 10 December 2023, at 20:13
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