Sovereignty and Secularization (RS 3CC3)
Fall 2011

TEXT PREPARATION 2

Assignment due in class on November 2* from some students

*Since part of the value of the text summary assignment is that it will prepare you to be an active participant in class, it may only be submitted in class on the day it is due.  If you have to miss that day's class, please contact the instructor to make alternate arrangements.

Please read the selections from Max Weber and Carl Schmitt assigned for November 2 and address the following two questions in well-written paragraphs (spanning approximately 3 pages). Since this is your first reading of this text, and since we have not yet discussed it in class, you are not being asked to supply definitive answers but preliminary, thoughtful responses based on close attention to the text. Your answers may also include 1-2 important questions raised by your reading for further discussion. 

1.
What traits of prophecy does Max Weber highlight that exemplify "charismatic" legitimation of authority?  Please draw on both reading selections (from Economy and Society and from Ancient Judaism) to answer the question.

2.
Carl Schmitt writes that when the state faces an "emergency" situation or a state of "exception," "the decision frees itself from all normative ties and becomes in the true sense absolute" (12).  Explain what he means by this.


As in your Text Summaries, please follow the guidelines in: Gordon Harvey, Writing with Sources, pp. 1-3, 6, 10-19, 22-23, 50-51 [purchase book / selection in Coursepack 1 / book on reserve]

For parenthetical page references, please use the following abbreviations:

  • "ES" for the selections from Economy and Society, ed. Roth/Wittich
  • "AJ" for the selection from Ancient Judaism
  • "Schmitt" for Carl Schmitt, Political Theology

**Please print your assignment double-spaced and with one-inch margins, using a 10-12-point font.  Please number and staple the pages you hand in. 

Please keep a copy of your summary to refer to in our class discussions.

 

posted October 28, 2011