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Two Reformers - Martin Luther and Mary Daly as Political Theologians (Paperback)
Loot Price: R574
Discovery Miles 5 740
You Save: R117
(17%)
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Two Reformers - Martin Luther and Mary Daly as Political Theologians (Paperback)
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List price R691
Loot Price R574
Discovery Miles 5 740
You Save R117 (17%)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Description: ""By them we have been carried away out of our own
land, as into a Babylonian captivity, and despoiled of all our
precious possessions."" Martin Luther, 1520 ""Their goal is our
deracination, which is 'detachment from one's background (as from
homeland, customs, traditions).' Thus women and other Elemental
creatures on this planet are rendered homeless, cut off from
knowledge of our Race's customs and traditions."" Mary Daly, 1984
What is this land, this world of which these two theologians are
speaking? Why do the two statements above sound similar in the
authors' longing for a true home, for our own land? And who is this
""them"" who carries us away and cuts us off? Could it be possible
that Martin Luther and Mary Daly, different in almost every way,
are saying something similar? Why do these key figures in the
Christian theological tradition, who come from different times,
places, and politics, engage in such a parallel task? How is this
possible? This book examines a series of surprising parallels
between two key reforming figures in the Christian theological
tradition and suggests that the two are in fact engaged in the same
task: political theology. Applying a new label to familiar
theologians enables readers to see both of them as well as their
reformations in a new light. The sixteenth-century Reformation and
second wave feminism are viewed through the pioneering work of
Luther and Daly here to further establish the political content and
consequence of these theologians. Endorsements: ""Of Two Reformers
it can be said that a daring thesis is half of an accomplishment.
The reader gets the audacity already in the cover, and the other
half of the accomplishment in the pages that follow, in a
remarkable journey of recovering the political meaning of
theological and ecclesial protest. Caryn Riswold's book finds a way
of bringing together voices of dissent in the utter dissonance of
the contexts of two thinkers that theology cannot afford to ignore
or read apart from the political causes they in common espoused and
from their frailty in the struggles they shared."" --Vitor
Westhelle author of The Scandalous God (Notice the accented ""i""
in ""Vitor."") About the Contributor(s): Caryn Riswold is Associate
Professor of Religion and Gender and Women's Studies at Illinois
College, Jacksonville, Illinois. She is also the author of Coram
Deo: Human Life in the Vision of God (2006).
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