Circumcisions. Jacques Derrida and the Tensions between Particularism and Universalism

Di Blasi, Luca (2013). Circumcisions. Jacques Derrida and the Tensions between Particularism and Universalism. Verifiche : rivista trimestrale di scienze umane(1-3), pp. 9-31. Trento

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The decision of the regional court in Cologne that circumcising male children for religious reasons amounts to bodily harm has provoked massive debates and united Judaism, Islam, and even Christianity in a common opposition against the possible consequence of this decision to limit religious circumcisions. Thus this conflict can serve as another example for tensions between particular (religious) groups and the universal claims of the constitutions of secular states. As I want to show in this paper, the very tension between particularism and universalism is in turn closely related to circumcision and can therefore be concretized and understood better through an analysis of various strategies (of Giorgio Agamben, Alain Badiou, and particularly Jacques Derrida) dealing with (Jewish) circumcision and its symbolizations.

Item Type:

Journal Article (Original Article)

Division/Institute:

01 Faculty of Theology > Institute of Systematic Theology > Dogmatics and Philosophy of Religion

Subjects:

100 Philosophy
200 Religion > 210 Philosophy & theory of religion

ISSN:

0391-4186

Publisher:

Trento

Language:

English

Submitter:

Luca Daniele Di Blasi

Date Deposited:

05 May 2022 10:49

Last Modified:

05 May 2022 10:49

BORIS DOI:

10.48350/169126

URI:

https://boris.unibe.ch/id/eprint/169126

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