The richness of recent research on women's worship gives witness
to the scholarly interest in its"contemporary" practice,
reflection, and construction. On the other hand, feminist
scholarship has had little impact on liturgical "historiography."
In "Women's Ways of Worship" Teresa Berger reconstructs liturgical
history from the perspectives of women. She shows that the
invisibility of women in the traditional liturgical narrative draws
into question the credibility of that narrative, especially at a
time when research into women's history has unearthed much material
relevant to women's liturgical lives.
Berger focuses on thirteen key interpretative principles that
guide the reconstruction of women at worship - from a
re-configuration of the canon of sources and a re-Visioning of
liturgical periodization to re-interpretation of anthropological
basics and of liturgical texts. On the basis of these principles,
she analyzes liturgical dynamics in two time periods crucial to the
history of women at worship: the early centuries of the Christian
Church and the twentieth-century liturgical renewal. Within the
twentieth-century liturgical renewal, Berger focuses on two
specific foci of renewal: the classical liturgical movement of the
first half of the century, and - as a case of history-in-the-
making" - the women's liturgical movement of the present day.
"Women's Ways of Worship" narrates both past and present
liturgical developments from the perspectives of women's lives,
heeding such dynamics as the genderization of liturgical space,
women- specific liturgical taboos, gender-specific devotional
practices, and the emergence of feminist liturgies. An epilogue
confronts the question of a future liturgy "beyond gender."
Convinced that reconstructing the history of women at worship
will offer a new Vision of the place of the women's liturgical
movement within liturgical history as a whole, Berger puts this
movement on a continuum of women at worship, which is a continuum
of struggle against the historic marginalization of women in most
liturgical contexts. As this struggle has come to the forefront
today, "Women's Ways of Worship" provides a context for change,
with women themselves being agents of both the questioning and the
transformation.
Chapters are "Reconstructing Women's Ways of Worship: In Search
of Methodological Principles," "Liturgical History Re-Constructed
(I): Early Christian Women at Worship," "Liturgical History Re-
Constructed (II): Women in the Twentieth-Century Liturgical
Movement," and "Liturgical History in the Making: The Women's
Liturgical Movement."
"Teresa Berger is associate professor of Ecumenical Theology at
the Divinity School of Duke University, Durham, North Carolina. She
is the author of numerous books and contributor to a variety of
journals including "Worship," published by The Liturgical
Press.""
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