Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements and Pre(r)amble
- 1 Introduction: Jesus Quests and Contexts
- Part I From Mont Pelerin to Eternity? Contextualizing an Age of Neoliberalism
- Part II Jesus in an Age of Neoliberalism
- Part III Contradictions
- 8 ‘Forgive Them; for They Do Not Know What They Are Doing!’ Other Problems, Extremes and the Social World of Jesus
- 9 Red Tory Christ
- 10 Conclusion: They Know It and They Don't
- Bibliography
- Index of Ancient Sources
- Index of Authors
- Index of Subjects
10 - Conclusion: They Know It and They Don't
from Part III - Contradictions
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements and Pre(r)amble
- 1 Introduction: Jesus Quests and Contexts
- Part I From Mont Pelerin to Eternity? Contextualizing an Age of Neoliberalism
- Part II Jesus in an Age of Neoliberalism
- Part III Contradictions
- 8 ‘Forgive Them; for They Do Not Know What They Are Doing!’ Other Problems, Extremes and the Social World of Jesus
- 9 Red Tory Christ
- 10 Conclusion: They Know It and They Don't
- Bibliography
- Index of Ancient Sources
- Index of Authors
- Index of Subjects
Summary
We are not aware of this, nevertheless we do it…
– Karl Marx…they know very well what they are doing, but still they are doing it…
– Slavoj ŽižekOne purpose of a book like this is to provide a context for future specific case studies on an aspect of Jesus and New Testament scholarship relating to neoliberalism and its cultural wings. We have certainly seen how issues surrounding neoliberalism have had a profound impact on historical Jesus studies over the past forty years. The whole industry has been swept along, like so much in contemporary culture, by neoliberal trends, from the intensification of marketing different Jesuses and Jesus the Great Man to a historical Jesus (or a historical Jesus who did not exist) being fought over in the so-called ‘culture wars’. All too often these Jesuses buy into dominant neoliberal trends and contribute to the masking of social realities. Even when some of the scholarship and thinking on Jesus and the Gospels thinks it is opposing dominant political and cultural trends, it can still manage to produce a context utterly complementary to the politics the scholar personally utterly opposes (see chapter 4). By way of analogy with the influence of dominant political trends on previous eras of New Testament studies, none of this ought to be a surprise, but as there remains a relative ignorance in mainstream historical Jesus studies of such historical analysis of its own intellectual history, then this point cannot be made too strongly.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Jesus in an Age of NeoliberalismQuests, Scholarship and Ideology, pp. 211 - 218Publisher: Acumen PublishingPrint publication year: 2012