- The Oxford Handbook of Carl Schmitt
- List of Contributors
- Carl Schmitt’s Life: A Chronology
- List of Carl Schmitt’s Writings
- “A Fanatic of Order in an Epoch of Confusing Turmoil”: The Political, Legal, and Cultural Thought of Carl Schmitt
- A “Catholic Layman of German Nationality and Citizenship”?: Carl Schmitt and the Religiosity of Life
- The “True Enemy”: Antisemitism in Carl Schmitt’s Life and Work
- Schmitt’s Diaries
- Carl Schmitt in Plettenberg
- Fearing the Disorder of Things: The Development of Carl Schmitt’s Institutional Theory, 1919–1942
- Carl Schmitt’s Political Theory of Dictatorship
- The Political Theology of Carl Schmitt
- Teaching in Vain: Carl Schmitt, Thomas Hobbes, and the Theory of the Sovereign State
- Concepts of the Political in Twentieth-Century European Thought
- Carl Schmitt’s Defense of Democracy
- Same/Other versus Friend/Enemy: Levinas contra Schmitt
- Carl Schmitt’s Concepts of War: A Categorical Failure
- Carl Schmitt’s Concept of History
- What’s “Left” in Schmitt?: From Aversion to Appropriation in Contemporary Political Theory
- A Jurist Confronting Himself: Carl Schmitt’s Jurisprudential Thought
- Carl Schmitt and the Weimar Constitution
- The Concept of the Rule-of-Law State in Carl Schmitt’s Verfassungslehre
- Hans Kelsen and Carl Schmitt: Growing Discord, Culminating in the “Guardian” Controversy of 1931
- States of Emergency
- Politonomy
- Carl Schmitt and International Law
- Demystifying Schmitt
- Carl Schmitt and Modernity
- Is “the Political” a Romantic Concept?: Novalis’s Faith and Love or The King and Queen with Reference to Carl Schmitt
- Walter Benjamin’s Esteem for Carl Schmitt
- Legitimacy of the Modern Age?: Hans Blumenberg and Carl Schmitt
- Tragedy as Exception in Carl Schmitt’s Hamlet or Hecuba
- At the Limits of Rhetoric: Authority, Commonplace, and the Role of Literature in Carl Schmitt
- Carl Schmitt’s Spatial Rhetoric
- Index
Abstract and Keywords
Carl Schmitt positioned his constitutional theory in the context of a “political theology” and referred to himself repeatedly as a Catholic. Schmitt scholarship has long pursued this self-depiction without establishing a convincing “Catholic” doctrine, political position, or life praxis. This chapter provides an overview and critical interrogation of Schmitt’s self-description. By emphasizing his political and theological distance from his early background and from the political Catholicism of the interwar period, the chapter analyzes his systematic connection of theism, personalism, and decisionism, and considers Schmitt as a “religious” author and person. Schmitt’s apocalyptically dramatized perception and stylization of life as a permanent “state of exception” can be seen as a religious practice of testing contingency and sovereignty and self-assigning to “salvation.” Schmitt must thus be understood not as a part of majority Catholicism, but beyond it, among the religious movements in the history of modern secular faith.
Keywords: Catholicism, theology, religious practice, theism, personalism, decisionism, state of exception
Reinhard Mehring, Institut für Gesellschaftswissenschaften, Pädagogische Hochschule Heidelberg
Access to the complete content on Oxford Handbooks Online requires a subscription or purchase. Public users are able to search the site and view the abstracts and keywords for each book and chapter without a subscription.
Please subscribe or login to access full text content.
If you have purchased a print title that contains an access token, please see the token for information about how to register your code.
For questions on access or troubleshooting, please check our FAQs, and if you can''t find the answer there, please contact us.
- The Oxford Handbook of Carl Schmitt
- List of Contributors
- Carl Schmitt’s Life: A Chronology
- List of Carl Schmitt’s Writings
- “A Fanatic of Order in an Epoch of Confusing Turmoil”: The Political, Legal, and Cultural Thought of Carl Schmitt
- A “Catholic Layman of German Nationality and Citizenship”?: Carl Schmitt and the Religiosity of Life
- The “True Enemy”: Antisemitism in Carl Schmitt’s Life and Work
- Schmitt’s Diaries
- Carl Schmitt in Plettenberg
- Fearing the Disorder of Things: The Development of Carl Schmitt’s Institutional Theory, 1919–1942
- Carl Schmitt’s Political Theory of Dictatorship
- The Political Theology of Carl Schmitt
- Teaching in Vain: Carl Schmitt, Thomas Hobbes, and the Theory of the Sovereign State
- Concepts of the Political in Twentieth-Century European Thought
- Carl Schmitt’s Defense of Democracy
- Same/Other versus Friend/Enemy: Levinas contra Schmitt
- Carl Schmitt’s Concepts of War: A Categorical Failure
- Carl Schmitt’s Concept of History
- What’s “Left” in Schmitt?: From Aversion to Appropriation in Contemporary Political Theory
- A Jurist Confronting Himself: Carl Schmitt’s Jurisprudential Thought
- Carl Schmitt and the Weimar Constitution
- The Concept of the Rule-of-Law State in Carl Schmitt’s Verfassungslehre
- Hans Kelsen and Carl Schmitt: Growing Discord, Culminating in the “Guardian” Controversy of 1931
- States of Emergency
- Politonomy
- Carl Schmitt and International Law
- Demystifying Schmitt
- Carl Schmitt and Modernity
- Is “the Political” a Romantic Concept?: Novalis’s Faith and Love or The King and Queen with Reference to Carl Schmitt
- Walter Benjamin’s Esteem for Carl Schmitt
- Legitimacy of the Modern Age?: Hans Blumenberg and Carl Schmitt
- Tragedy as Exception in Carl Schmitt’s Hamlet or Hecuba
- At the Limits of Rhetoric: Authority, Commonplace, and the Role of Literature in Carl Schmitt
- Carl Schmitt’s Spatial Rhetoric
- Index