Tim K

3%
Flag icon
But in fact, my primary audience is more existential. I hope this book will make Taylor’s analysis accessible to a wide array of “practitioners” — by which I mean, simply, those of us living in this cultural moment, who feel the cross-pressures and malaise and “fragilization” that he identifies, those who have absorbed mental maps of our secular age from Death Cab for Cutie and David Foster Wallace.
How (Not) to Be Secular: Reading Charles Taylor
Rate this book
Clear rating