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Critical Enthusiasm by Jordana Rosenberg
Critical Enthusiasm by Jordana Rosenberg






Critical Enthusiasm by Jordana Rosenberg Critical Enthusiasm by Jordana Rosenberg

But, as I hope to illustrate, Marx’s language on enthusiasm shifts, specifically from Enthusiasmus to Begeisterung, tracing Marx’s changing thinking on the communist revolution, as well as the religious imaginary. If capital’s power manifests itself in abstractions that re-disguise materiality, enthusiasm might appear as a significant resource for capitalism, generating new pathways for novelty (Toscano 2008).

Critical Enthusiasm by Jordana Rosenberg

2īecause of this complicated admixture of religious and revolutionary potencies, we should not be surprised that Marx struggled to orient himself to the concept of enthusiasm. And, by the end of the 18 th century, enthusiasm seemed to have become a centerpiece of revolutionary, rather than religious, life. 1 In the long history of this Western phenomenon, it was generally thought that the only real measure of humanity’s access to divinity could be confirmed by the expression of something named “enthusiasm.” Over time a series of religious reformations coupled with modern social and political enlightenments, transformed enthusiasm from a religious affect into a political danger. Enthusiasm, an affect once associated with abstraction and testimony to divine inspiration, has its origins in religious experience.








Critical Enthusiasm by Jordana Rosenberg