Theologies of Reading

Activity: Talk or presentationInvited talk

Description

Today, the assumption made by most is that reading is about ‘getting’ content. Reading has become so much the medium of consumption, that we are at risk of losing the ability to reflect on the action of reading itself. To do so is to assume that meaning or truth remains stable in a text, and may seem an encroachment on the freedom of the individual reader. Yet liberalism has its own encroachments, assuming not only the possibility but the desirability of disinterested reading.

This seminar series, held at CRASSH in 2017-18, sets out to interrogate the assumption that reading should or could be disinterested. It asks instead: in what ways does reading remain interested in questions of truth and meaning?

Historically, religious traditions have formulated some of the most detailed regimes of reading, resulting in practices such as Lectio Divina, Quranic recitation and Midrash. But literary-critical disciplines such as philology, prosody and deconstruction have also developed practices of reading which, though they may disavow ‘truth’, share common terms, methodologies and horizons of meaning with religious practices. All these practices, we propose, bear scrutiny as ‘theologies’ of reading. New practices continue to emerge. While some, following Michel Foucault and Peter Sloterdijk, insist on the therapeutic and ‘anthropotechnic’ uses of texts, the media suggests speed and velocity as a criterion of value. In the face of this multiplicity of programs, all vying for supremacy while disavowing the possibilities of a common practice it has never been more important to refrain from asking not only, ‘what do we read?’ but also: ‘how do we read?’

Each session introduces two speakers who will deliver brief presentations of a reading practice —historical or contemporary, sacred or secular—and then, together with the group, will discuss a pre-circulated text which resists or exemplifies the style under consideration.
Period28 Jan 2018
Held atCRASSH, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom
Degree of RecognitionInternational