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Unearthly Powers
Religious and Political Change in World History

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  • Date Published: May 2019
  • availability: Available
  • format: Paperback
  • isbn: 9781108701952

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About the Authors
  • Why was religion so important for rulers in the pre-modern world? And how did the world come to be dominated by just a handful of religious traditions, especially Christianity, Islam, and Buddhism? Drawing on sociology and anthropology, as well as a huge range of historical literature from all regions and periods of world history, Alan Strathern sets out a new way of thinking about transformations in the fundamental nature of religion and its interaction with political authority. His analysis distinguishes between two quite different forms of religiosity - immanentism, which focused on worldly assistance, and transcendentalism, which centred on salvation from the human condition - and shows how their interaction shaped the course of history. Taking examples drawn from Ancient Rome to the Incas or nineteenth-century Tahiti, a host of phenomena, including sacred kingship, millenarianism, state-church struggles, reformations, iconoclasm, and, above all, conversion are revealed in a new light.

    • Provides a new theoretical understanding of religious change and its relationship with politics
    • Offers a rich interdisciplinary analysis drawing on history, anthropology, historical sociology and religious studies
    • Provides examples from all regions and periods of pre-modern world history
    Read more

    Awards

    • Winner 2020 Bentley Prize, World History Association

    Reviews & endorsements

    'As an extraordinarily original, articulate analysis of the relation between religious thought and political power during some three thousand years, this is a tour de force that bears comparison to some of Max Weber's classic writings. Strathern's combination of theoretical sophistication, intellectual ambition, and elegant writing has no contemporary rival.' Victor B. Lieberman, Raoul Wallenberg Distinguished University Professor of History, University of Michigan

    ‘This ambitious and highly sophisticated work of comparative history offers a wide-ranging exploration of the relationship between religion and politics in the pre-modern world. It seeks to uncover the logic underlying the way in which traditional sacred kingship responded, by means of ruler conversion, to the spread of transcendentalist religions like Buddhism, Christianity and Islam. This is an important and richly rewarding book.' Joan-Pau Rubiés, ICREA Research Professor, Universiat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona

    ‘Unearthly Powers is a magisterial and masterful study. By combining a sweeping historical vision with a sharp anthropological lens, Strathern provides a comprehensive framework to explore the dilemmas of religion and politics - god and king - that continue to animate humanity.' A. Azfar Moin, University of Texas

    ‘Karl Jasper's powerful notion of ‘transcendence' in the Axial Age has provoked scholars and thinkers over several generations. Strathern subjects the idea to new scrutiny exploring how this invisible source of such immense historical power came to dominate the pre-modern world by its management of immanentist religion and political power.' Prasenjit Duara, Oscar Tang Professor, Duke University. North Carolina

    ‘This book will be a required reading for any historian of religion and a milestone in the development of the field of global religious history. It is the product of mature and wide-ranging scholarship, displaying an extraordinary breadth of knowledge of scholarly literature and historical detail relating to disparate cultural regions around the world. To read this book is to embark on both a global and an intellectual journey with multiple engaging destinations. It is well worth the ride.’ Mark Juergensmeyer, Journal of Church and State

    ‘The book is widely researched and lucidly written … particular interest to scholars and students of public theology.’ Luke Larner, Theology

    ‘Unearthly Powers will be a milestone in the study of sacral kingship and cross-cultural contacts involving negotiations of political and religious authority.’ Jonathan Brack, Journal of Early Modern History

    ‘… Strathern has with considerable brilliance opened up a rich field for debate and reflection.’ Brian Stanley, Journal of Ecclesiastical History

    See more reviews

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    Product details

    • Date Published: May 2019
    • format: Paperback
    • isbn: 9781108701952
    • length: 404 pages
    • dimensions: 228 x 153 x 20 mm
    • weight: 0.66kg
    • contains: 7 b/w illus.
    • availability: Available
  • Table of Contents

    Introduction
    1. The two forms of religion: being and nothingness
    2. Religion as the fabric of the state
    3. The two forms of sacred kingship: divinization and righteousness
    4. The economy of ritual efficacy and the empirical reception of Christianity
    5. The conversion of kings under the conditions of immanentism: Constantine to Cakobau
    6. Dreams of state: conversion as the making of kings and subjects
    Conclusion
    Glossary of theoretical terms.

  • Author

    Alan Strathern, University of Oxford
    Alan Strathern is an Associate Professor of History at the University of Oxford, and Tutor and Fellow in History at Brasenose College, Oxford. He is the author of Kingship and Conversion in Sixteenth Century Sri Lanka: Portuguese Imperialism in a Buddhist Land (Cambridge, 2008), and co-editor with Zoltán Biedermann of Sri Lanka at the Crossroads of History (2017). He was awarded a Philip Leverhulme Prize in History in 2010.

    Awards

    • Winner 2020 Bentley Prize, World History Association

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