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The Function of Criticism and Politics

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 July 2024

Extract

When I suggested that the Christian tradition is to be identified primarily with its central ‘works’—the Bible and the liturgy—and that it is something analogous to literary criticism which can most easily make available its meanings and values, I denied that Christianity can be identified with politics. That Christianity has implications which are political, in the fullest sense, needn’t be insisted on in these pages. The nature of any identity, however, is something which still needs to be queried, especially in the light of the simplification of human affairs which it invariably threatens to introduce. It isn’t merely a liberal equivocation which prompts this questioning; an active spirit of criticism demands it, if the values which are invoked aren’t, in the end, to be betrayed. Terry Eagleton’s ‘Faith and Revolution’ is a case in point, and since it is explicitly offered as a contribution to the debate about ‘the points of theoretical convergence between Christianity and Marxism’ no better example need be looked for.

Eagleton is particularly concerned to examine the ‘point of divergence’ which appears once this convergence has been established, and he wants to locate the distinguishing characteristics of Christianity without opting either for ‘a merely theoretical divergence’ or for ‘some specifically “Christian” revolutionary practice’:

‘How are we to steer between, on the one hand, an intellectualist reductionism which leaves faith hanging in the air above Christian historical practice, and, on the other hand, an insistence that faith must show up in a distinctive form of praxis which runs into the traditional Christian mistake of redundantly duplicating social institutions?’

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1972 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers

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References

page 155 note 1 ‘The Function of Criticism and Theology’, New Blackfriars, July 1971.

page 155 note 2 New Blackfriars, April 1971.

page 157 note 1 My criticism of Marxist theory isn't that it is never acted upon, but that it is acted on exclusively so that any limitations of theory still aply. Praxis is not fully itself somehow, I know the relaionship between them is meant to be reciprocal but the reality is often different.

page 159 note 1 E.g. McLellan, David, Marx's Grundrisse (London 1971)Google Scholar.

page 159 note 2 In 1851 Marx wrote to Engles, ‘In five weeks I will be through with a whole economic shift’.

page 161 note 1 Critique of Hegel's Philosophy of Right. This seems very reminiscent of Marx's own criticism of other‐worldly Christianity, and indeed, in its theoretical self‐confidence, helps us to identify what it was in christianity that laid it open to this reproach.

page 161 note 2 Cf. Arthur Koestler's Darkness at Noon.