No Bosses, No Gods: Marx, Engels, and the Twenty-first Century Study of Religion by Matthew Day
Flagging enrollments. Disappearing majors. Closed departments. The academic study of religion is in trouble. No Bosses, No Gods argues that Karl Marx is essential for reversing coursebut it will take letting go of what most scholars think they know about him.
The books first half draws on the scholarship of international specialistsas well as new translations of the original German textsto present Marx the anti-theorist, a political journalist deeply skeptical about what happens when the professoriate sits down to "theorize" about social worlds. The second half appeals to this modified portrait of Marx and charts a new course beyond both actually existing religious studies and contemporary genealogies of the religion category. The result, perhaps, is an academic study of religion worth having in the twenty-first century.