This paper revisits a canonical text of queer theory, Lee Edelman’s No Future: Queer Theory and the Death Drive (2004), and argues that this book has been misunderstood insofar as it has not been received as theorizing the secular. Taking No Future as a work of philosophy of religion in the sense that, like much work in philosophy of religions over the past two decades, it attempts to expose the religious genealogy of Western secular modernity, the paper puts this book into conversation with philosophy of religion and religious studies more broadly. This conversation affords a fresh reading of Edelman’s familiar critique of “reproductive futurism” alert to its intersections with such themes and discourses of philosophy of religion as political theology, aura, the post-secular turn, and messianism/messianicity.
You are viewing content from the "Annual Meeting 2023" which is an archived meeting.
Attached Paper
Annual Meeting 2023
No God, No Future: Lee Edelman’s Queer Secularity
Papers Session: Philosophy of Religion With(out) Queer Theory
Abstract for Online Program Book (maximum 150 words)
Authors
