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Radical Philosophy Review

Volume 9, Issue 1, 2006

Martin Beck Matuštík
Pages 65-77
DOI: 10.5840/radphilrev2006912

Identity or Roots, Idol or Icon?
Exploration of a New Critical Theory of Race

What does race add to class, as both are secular social categories? The difficulties of invidious nationalism and the conservation of races that would not foment holy wars of terror persist for both secular or postsecular theorists. Postsecular thinkers are in a stronger position than a secular theorist to challenge religiously inflected social integrations, invidious nationalism, and fundamentalism. Unmasking them as social formation proffers an external criticism, to speak of them as sacralizations of identity exposes them at the root. Secular theorists ignore postsecular sensibility at the peril of failing to challenge the invidious claim to roots that secular nationalism and religious fundamentalism profess.

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