The Political Theology of the “Surveillance Society”

Lordless Powers, Drones and the “Eye of God”

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7213/2175-1838.14.001.DS05

Abstract

The article describes today’s surveillance society through a theo-political lens. References to the “all-seeing eye,” “Big Brother,” and the “panopticon” conceptualize surveillance technologies through language of divine omniscience, while at the same time Christians start rearticulating their doctrine of God in terms and images from surveillance cultures, too. With Karl Barth’s notion of “lordless powers,” the article interprets the emergence of a society structured by surveillance technologies as a form of “human knowledge gone wild.” With a rereading of Psalm 139, the article aims for a demythologization of surveillance while at the same time demanding the development of more “demonological” accounts of political ethics.

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Published

2022-05-23

How to Cite

Reichel, H. (2022). The Political Theology of the “Surveillance Society”: Lordless Powers, Drones and the “Eye of God”. Pistis Praxis, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.7213/2175-1838.14.001.DS05