Taking on the Guild: Tomoko Masuzawa and The Invention of World Religions

Author: King, Richard1

Source: Method & Theory in the Study of Religion, Volume 20, Number 2, 2008 , pp. 125-133(9)

Publisher: BRILL

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Abstract:

This review provides a reading of Tomoko Masuzawa's The Invention of World Religions (2005) based upon the psychoanalytically-inflected, post-structuralist approach that Masuzawa developed in her first book, In Search of Dreamtime (1993). It is argued that there is a tension in the book between two theses—(i) that the discourse of world religions perpetuates Christian theological universalism and (ii) that the discourse of world religions perpetuates a Eurocentric view of the world. Ambiguity about this question within Masuzawa's narrative allows those who propound a broadly secular approach to the study of religion ("the guild' to which the author aligns herself) to read her work as a critique of ongoing Christian theological trends in the study of religion despite the fact that the primary narrative direction of the book offers an account that seeks to cut across the secular-theological dichotomy by challenging the Euro-(American) paradigms (whether Christian or post-Christian and secular) that continue to dominate this field of study.

Keywords: WORLD RELIGION; INVENTION; EUROPEAN UNIVERSALISM; CHRISTIAN THEOLOGICAL UNIVERSALISM

Document Type: Research article

DOI: 10.1163/157006808X283543

Affiliations: 1: Department of Religion, Vanderbilt University, 2201 West End Avenue, Nashville, Tennessee 37235, USA

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