Sexual Difference, Gender, and Agency in Karl Barth's Church Dogmatics: T&T Clark Explorations in Reformed Theology
Autor Dr Faye Bodley-Dangeloen Limba Engleză Paperback – 21 apr 2021
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780567698285
ISBN-10: 0567698289
Pagini: 208
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 16 mm
Greutate: 0.3 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția T&T Clark
Seria T&T Clark Explorations in Reformed Theology
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0567698289
Pagini: 208
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 16 mm
Greutate: 0.3 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția T&T Clark
Seria T&T Clark Explorations in Reformed Theology
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Locates resources in Barth's theological anthropology and ethics for anti-essentialist performative account of gender
Notă biografică
Faye Bodley-Dangelois Managing Editor at Harvard Theological Review, USA.
Cuprins
Acknowledgments IntroductionChapter One: Rehabilitating the Agent of Theological DiscourseChapter Two: Playing the Neighbor in an "Order of Praise" Chapter Three: Re-orienting the Agent in the Doctrine of Creation Chapter Four: Playing Adam and Silencing Eve Chapter Five: Re-Orienting the Agent of a Theological Anthropology Chapter Six: An Ethic for the Sexually Differentiated Self ConclusionBibliographyIndex
Recenzii
[D]eeply researched, well-argued, and poignantly relevant ... [I]mportant not only for Barth studies, but for the ongoing conversations regarding the significance of otherness, difference, and agency in theological anthropology. Anyone seeking to understand the issues and assets within Barth's own account, interested in engagement with existing secondary literature, and looking for a compelling correction to and relevant re-reading of Barth's Christological anthropology need look no further than Bodley-Dangelo's work.
Sexual Difference is a gift to Barth scholarship and to contemporary theological ethics and deserves a careful read ... in 181 deftly economical pages, Bodley-Dangelo demonstrates the sort of perspicacity one would want to see brought to bear on other parts of the Church Dogmatics as well ... Constructively engaging Barth on his own terms, Bodley-Dangelo makes space for the possibility of creative performances of sexual difference that are more in keeping with the concrete christological pattern of human agency he himself wishes to uphold.
This is by far one of the most sophisticated and nuanced analyses of Barth on Gender and Sexuality we have in the English language. Dr. Bodley-Dangelo's powerful intervention might finally pull Barth Studies out of the quagmire of obsessive defense or impatient dismissal of Barth's Theological Anthropology.
Of the many excellent studies of Barth on gender and sexual difference this one stands out as the best . Leading us through the complexities and ambiguities of Barth's position, Bodley-Dangelo offers a compelling account of what Barth actually said along with convincing reconstructions of what he might have said but regrettably did not. I recommend it enthusiastically for anyone who is interested in the theology of gender or the theology of Barth.
Bodley-Dangelo's searingly acute analysis reveals the breadth and depth of the problems in Karl Barth's theology with respect to sex, gender, and sexuality, as well as pointing a way beyond them. This book is a crucial new reference point for any adequate theological reception of Barth's thought.
Faye Bodley-Dangelo has tackled afresh the contentious subject of Barth's attitudes to women and gender in the Church Dogmatics, and given the subject a completely new hermeneutical and critical twist by a focus on Barth's christological account of human agency. This is a book of great sophistication, clarity and insight, and its lessons will need to be absorbed not only by Barth scholars but by all theologians who work on contemporary issues of gender and the Christian tradition.
By exploring Barth's Dogmatics through the lens of human agency rather than the ordering of central relationships, Bodley-Dangelo locates resources within Barth's theology that resist and challenge his sexist and heterosexist matrix. This close reading of Barth's construal of agency in his christocentric theological anthropology is a vital and compelling contribution to Barth scholarship, that neither overlooks nor overdetermines the gender trouble in Barth's theology.
Sexual Difference is a gift to Barth scholarship and to contemporary theological ethics and deserves a careful read ... in 181 deftly economical pages, Bodley-Dangelo demonstrates the sort of perspicacity one would want to see brought to bear on other parts of the Church Dogmatics as well ... Constructively engaging Barth on his own terms, Bodley-Dangelo makes space for the possibility of creative performances of sexual difference that are more in keeping with the concrete christological pattern of human agency he himself wishes to uphold.
This is by far one of the most sophisticated and nuanced analyses of Barth on Gender and Sexuality we have in the English language. Dr. Bodley-Dangelo's powerful intervention might finally pull Barth Studies out of the quagmire of obsessive defense or impatient dismissal of Barth's Theological Anthropology.
Of the many excellent studies of Barth on gender and sexual difference this one stands out as the best . Leading us through the complexities and ambiguities of Barth's position, Bodley-Dangelo offers a compelling account of what Barth actually said along with convincing reconstructions of what he might have said but regrettably did not. I recommend it enthusiastically for anyone who is interested in the theology of gender or the theology of Barth.
Bodley-Dangelo's searingly acute analysis reveals the breadth and depth of the problems in Karl Barth's theology with respect to sex, gender, and sexuality, as well as pointing a way beyond them. This book is a crucial new reference point for any adequate theological reception of Barth's thought.
Faye Bodley-Dangelo has tackled afresh the contentious subject of Barth's attitudes to women and gender in the Church Dogmatics, and given the subject a completely new hermeneutical and critical twist by a focus on Barth's christological account of human agency. This is a book of great sophistication, clarity and insight, and its lessons will need to be absorbed not only by Barth scholars but by all theologians who work on contemporary issues of gender and the Christian tradition.
By exploring Barth's Dogmatics through the lens of human agency rather than the ordering of central relationships, Bodley-Dangelo locates resources within Barth's theology that resist and challenge his sexist and heterosexist matrix. This close reading of Barth's construal of agency in his christocentric theological anthropology is a vital and compelling contribution to Barth scholarship, that neither overlooks nor overdetermines the gender trouble in Barth's theology.