"This collection gathers essays from a 2009 Syracuse University conference titled 'The Politics of Love.' The contributors are less interested in 'whether people believe in religion or god' than in 'what the modern notion of religion has done in the world, what kinds of subjectivities it has produced ... what forms of inequalities, what conceptions of justice and freedom [it has] enabled and foreclosed.' French feminist Hélène Cixous (Le Prénom de Dieu, 1967) reflects poignantly on her 40-year dialogue on God's existence with Jacques Derrida, her experience of his death, and her hopes for resurrection (i.e., 'what one doesn't believe in'). Mark Jordan (Harvard Divinity School; Recruiting Young Love, CH, Sep'11, 49-0219) offers an essay titled 'The Return of Religion during the Reign of Sexuality'; Saba Mahmood (Univ. of California, Berkeley; Politics of Piety: The Islamic Revival and the Feminist Subject, 2005) critiques the genre of women's anti-Islamic autobiographies so popular among feminists; Gianni Vattimo (emer., Univ. of Turin; The End of Modernity, CH, Nov'89, 27-1492) defends postmodern atheistic Christianity; and Sarah Coakley (Univ. of Cambridge; editor, Religion and the Body, 1997) explores a nonviolent, nonviolating conception of sacrifice. A thought-provoking roundtable transcript concludes this worthwhile, eclectic collection. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above. —Choice"—S. Young, McHenry County College, April 2012
"This is certainly a welcome addition to the library of philosophers of religion, as well as feminist and gender theorists and students."—Hypatia
"[This] volume is an ambitious amalgamation of perspectives. Its multiplicity is its strength, tying the entries together through symbolic and ideological similarity. Feminism, Sexuality and the Return of Religion rejects the urge to catalogue or homogenise, embracing a structure more reflective of the heterogeneity that suffuses its subject matter."—Religion and Gender
"This remarkable work assembles the papers given at the eponymous 2007 Syracuse University conference in the series on Postmodernism, Culture, and Religion. . . . The reader gets a palpable sense of the excitement and collaboration that animated the conference . . . The theorists go to the heart of some of the most exciting problems and possibilities that emerge when religion, gender, and sexuality interrogate one another, using the tools of anthropology, theology, postcolonial studies, and more. In doing so, they testify to the ongoing vibrancy of feminist inquiry in religious studies."—Religious Studies Review
"[A] worthwhile, eclectic collection. . . . Recommended."—Choice
"Ambitious, promising, and timely as it works to cross-pollinate three of the most powerful forces in contemporary society: feminism, sexuality, and religion."—James Olthuis, Institute for Christian Studies
"The intellectual breadth and depth represented here is potent and will attract readers from a variety of disciplines."—Ellen Armour, Vanderbilt Divinity School