The Theological-Political Turn
A Critique
Geraldine Muhlmann author Andrew Brown translator
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Polity Press
Publishing:13th Aug '26
£65.00
This title is due to be published on 13th August, and will be despatched as soon as possible.
This hardback is available in another edition too:
- Paperback£18.99(9781509567324)

In recent years numerous authors have claimed that underneath everything political there lies something religious – an underground religious substance, as it were. These religious elements, it is said, are the essence of political phenomena and the driving force of their history. Even in our modern 'secularized' politics, the heart of the matter, it is alleged, is religious, just as it was in the past. This fashion for the theological-political can be observed in the most varied trends in contemporary philosophy, from the work of Giorgio Agamben and Charles Taylor to that of Richard Rorty and Jürgen Habermas.
In Géraldine Muhlmann's view, this 'theological-political' idea is a sham. It sheds no light on the factors that underlie key political developments, such as the crisis of liberal democracies and the rise of authoritarianism. It has nothing to say about the concrete ways in which religious points of reference, when they do exist, are used to wage war or to make politics. It contributes nothing to reflection on political matters and it leads us astray by failing to attend to their specific, complex and intertwined logics.
So what accounts for the rise of theological-political thought? Muhlmann argues that its popularity has less to do with a genuine attempt to understand politics and more to do with a desire by philosophers to demonstrate their ability to grasp the substantial basis of politics and the true direction of political history. In other words, the triumph of the theological-political is a philosophical hubris – and a dangerous one at that.
This ambitious inquiry into the rise of a troubling philosophical zeitgeist will be of great interest to students and scholars in philosophy, political theory and religious studies and to anyone interested in the ideas that are shaping our world today.
"A reaction against 20th Century secularism has been brewing among philosophers in Europe and North America. Arguments under the rubric "theo-politics" describe religion as a key historical force, shaping modern culture as it shaped ancient culture, working invisibly, in the underground of our minds. In this detailed and nuanced book, Geraldine Muhlmann presents a strong, inciteful critique of "theo-politics" in all its versions."
Michael Walzer, Princeton University
"In this exquisitely written book, Géraldine Muhlmann traces the ongoing propulsion of liberal and left-liberal thought – from Dewey and Bergson to Rorty, Habermas, Agamben and Taylor – to the exorbitance of belief in a hidden, almost undetectable, subterranean "religious substance" underlying and governing all history. Modern political theology, Muhlmann demonstrates, is the evacuation of politics, the unwillingness and inability to accept historical contingency, risk, and tragic loss that are the joint conditions for democratic life. Today it is the authoritarian right, religious and irreligious, that embraces political theology as the ground and justification for its repressive actions and even more repressive policies. Muhlmann's urgent and necessary work belongs on the shelf of every student of modern politics."
J.M. Bernstein, New School for Social Research
ISBN: 9781509567317
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
288 pages