1st Edition

Reading Modernity, Modernism and Religion Today Spinoza and Van Gogh

By Patrick Grant Copyright 2025
    136 Pages
    by Routledge

    Feelings of rootlessness, fragmentation and loneliness are endemic in today’s secular societies. In the late nineteenth century, Emile Durkheim described this kind of social malaise as anomie, a concept which this book locates within a historical narrative of the emergence of Modernism from Modernity. The book focuses on two representative figures, Benedictus de Spinoza and Vincent van Gogh, on whose work it offers some significant new perspectives. Spinoza drew up a blueprint for Modernity, which is to say, the cultural transformations that took place as a result of the Scientific Revolution and the Protestant Reformation. In counterpoint to his overriding confidence in reason, a persistent current in Spinoza’s writing shows how concerned he was about a possible loss of confidence in his governing idea of a single Substance, the philosophical God with which he sought to replace the creator God of the Bible. In promoting art as a means of filling the gap left by the absence of Spinoza’s philosophical God and the failures of traditional Christianity, Van Gogh also discovered the limitations of the vocation to which he had dedicated himself. He concluded that, in the tension between art and anomie, a new kind of religious sensibility and understanding might emerge. This remains the case in the current postmodern cultural phase when fragmentation and incoherence are summoning up new assessments and re-configurations of values promoting new forms of solidarity, dialogue and religious understanding.

    Preface

    Chapter 1       Introduction

    -       The language mosaic

    -       Dialogue, anomie and the conservation of gains

    -       Spinoza and Van Gogh: narratives of transformation

    Chapter 2       Spinoza’s Bad Dream

    -       Spinoza in outline

    -       Metaphysics, mystery and double reading

    -       The critique of religion

    -       Infinite series

    -       Self-interest and seeking truth with others

    -       Conclusion

    Chapter 3       Interlude: From Modernity to Modernism

    Chapter 4       Van Gogh and Modernism

    -       Recapitulation and making new

    -       The religious phase

    -       An Enlightenment critique

    -       Romantic self-fashioning

    -       Paris, Arles and St. Rémy: the “draughtsman’s fist” recovered

    -       Conclusion

    Chapter 5       Conclusion: Modernity, Modernism and the Religious Question

    Index

    Biography

    Patrick Grant is Professor Emeritus at the University of Victoria, British Columbia, Canada. He has published widely on relationships among literature, religion and secularism. He has a special interest in literature of the English Renaissance, literary theory, and the literature and culture of modern Northern Ireland. He has published a series of books on the letters of Vincent van Gogh.