One problem is Feuerbach often gets schematized as a stepping stone
from Hegel to Marx in the 'progress' of the history of thought. It
would tempting to deal with a host of other 19th century thinkers AND
Marx. For some in European traditions, it might be interesting to
re-visit Sartre, as a synthesis (put simplistically) of Marx and
Kierkegaard.

Not looking so much at 'Marxist approaches to religion' but simply
religion and Marx at what is on the web, and I find the following of
interest:

http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/subject/religion/index.htm

http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/subject/religion/book-revelations.htm

Still, in the Engels' piece I think we could say this is a Marxist
approach to religion (to hermeneutics, which were, as far as I know,
originally German Christian hermeneutics before the post-modern
episteme gave us things like 'Wittgenstinian approaches to
hermeneutics').

CJ

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