The Death of God theologians represented one of the most
influential religious movements that emerged of the 1960s, a decade
in which the discipline of theology underwent revolutionary change.
Although they were from different traditions, utilized varied
methods of analysis, and focused on culture in distinctive ways,
the four religious thinkers who sparked radical theology--Thomas
Altizer, William Hamilton, Richard Rubenstein, and Paul Van
Buren--all considered the Holocaust as one of the main challenges
to the Christian faith. Thirty years later, a symposium organized
by the American Academy of Religion revisited the Death of God
movement by asking these four radical theologians to reflect on how
awareness of the Holocaust affected their thinking, not only in the
1960s but also in the 1990s. This edited volume brings together
their essays, along with responses by other noted scholars who
offer critical commentary on the movement's impact, legacy, and
relationship to the Holocaust.
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