Voices from the Edge
Centring Marginalized Perspectives in Analytic Theology
Michael Rea editor Michelle Panchuk editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press
Published:1st Jul '20
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Over the past several decades, scholars working in biblical, theological, and religious studies have increasingly attended to the substantive ways that our experiences and understanding of God and God's relation to the world are structured by our experiences and concepts of race, gender, disability, and sexuality. These personal and social identities and their intersections serve as a hermeneutical lens for our interpretations of God, self, the other, and our religious texts and traditions. However, they have not received nearly the same level of attention from analytic theologians and philosophers of religion, and so a wide range of important issues remain ripe for analytic treatment. The papers in this volume address the various ways in which the aforementioned social identities intersect with, shape, and might be shaped by the questions with which analytic theology and philosophy of religion have typically been concerned, as well as what new questions they suggest to the discipline. We focus on three central areas of analytic theology: methodological principles, the intersection of social identities with religious epistemology, and the connections among eschatology, ante-mortem suffering, and ante-mortem social perceptions of bodies.
This new canon, even if aspirational, is a conversational centerpiece because of the volume's intentionalstrategy of deploying friction to facilitate peace. * Jill Hernandez, International Journal for Philosophy of Religion *
ISBN: 9780198848844
Dimensions: 235mm x 161mm x 19mm
Weight: 514g
256 pages