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After Essentialism
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15 February 2027

By recovering a canon of continental philosophy forgotten by religious studies, After Essentialism resuscitates a key resource for addressing the challenges that face the field today.
Phenomenology was once the dominant philosophical methodology for studying religion. Early giants like Rudolf Otto and Mircea Eliade sought to identify both the individual experiences of religious believers and commonalities across world religions. Such an approach, however, was criticized and dismissed for ignoring the historical and social contexts that also exerted influence on religious belief and practice. But by discarding phenomenology of religion, the contemporary academy made a costly mistake: it also dismissed philosophical phenomenology.
In After Essentialism, Joshua Lupo resuscitates this neglected philosophical lineage, beginning with the insights of Edmund Husserl. He then untangles the relationship between classical philosophical phenomenology and phenomenology of religion, focusing especially on Rudolf Otto, Gerardus van der Leeuw, and Mircea Eliade. Finally, he turns to Martin Heidegger’s existential phenomenology as a resource for grounding the practice of critique that is central to humanistic inquiry.
After Essentialism thereby offers a critical phenomenology that centers the first-person perspective for studying religion while simultaneously confronting the broader contexts of systemic issues, such as racism and sexism, that have effects on religious belief and practice at the individual and communal levels.
“Joshua Lupo attempts to break new ground with a new disciplinary method: ‘critical’ phenomenology of religion. With fresh reformulations of canonical figures like Otto and Eliade in light of the phenomenological methods of Husserl and Heidegger, the author succeeds in challenging the essentialism that continues to haunt religious studies today. Only a properly ‘hermeneutical’ approach to the phenomenon of religion can undo the strict dualism between the scholar of religion and the practitioner of religion.” —Joseph Rivera, co-editor of Theological Fringes of Phenomenology
Joshua Lupo is the assistant director of research and editorial strategy at the Ansari Institute for Global Engagement with Religion. He is the co-editor of a number of books, most recently Engaging the Madrasa: Education and Islamic Thought in a Changing World.
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Reviving Phenomenology as a Critical Methodology
Part 1. Phenomenology’s Essentialist History in Religious Studies
1. To Cover One’s Eyes with an Angel’s Wings: Essentialist Phenomenology, Intentionality, and the Study of Religion
2. Understanding the Numinous: Taxonomy as Phenomenology
3. Mircea Eliade, Phenomenology, and Power
Part 2. A Critical Phenomenology for Religious Studies
4. Factical Life Experience and the Origins of Critique
5. The Critiquing Subject in Being and Time and Beyond
Conclusion: Genealogy, Postcritique, and the Postsecular Turn
References