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Hospitality is something of a modern paradox. On the one hand,
hospitality connotes a nicety or pleasantry easily undervalued as a
ritual or formality devoid of epistemological or ethical content.
On the other hand, the rise in international conflict and violence,
the decline of civil speech, and the increased hostility toward
immigrants points to the dire need for hospitable responses to
mitigate tensions. Hospitality represents a further paradox for
feminism. Historically, women have been saddled with
disproportionate responsibility for hospitality and have also been
treated as unwelcome guests in so many arenas. For these reasons,
feminists have good reason to be wary of addressing hospitality.
Yet, feminist theory has taken the lead on developing ontological,
epistemological, and ethical approaches to connectedness and
relationality such that addressing hospitality appears to be an
appropriate extrapolation. Feminism and Hospitality is a collection
that negotiates amidst these intriguing paradoxes. Feminism and
Hospitality: Gender in the Host/Guest Relationship is the first
collection of original works to bring a feminist analysis to issues
and theories of personal, political, economic, and artistic
hospitality. Furthermore, because feminist theorists have brought
so much attention to the nature of human relationships, this volume
employs a fresh analysis beyond the tradition in political theory.
What is the proper relationship of religion to power? In this
collection of essays, a group of interdisciplinary scholars address
that question, building on the scholarship of the late Dr. Jean
Bethke Elshtain. The first section of this book provides the reader
with three previously unpublished essays by Elshtain on the subject
of political sovereignty, followed by an interview with the noted
ethicist and political theorist. Dr. Elshtain questions the nature
of sovereignty in a world where some have elevated the state and
the self above the authority of God himself. In the second section
of the book, "Sovereignty through the Ages", four scholars explore
some of the key questions raised by Dr. Elshtain's work on Just
War, resistance to tyranny, political liberalism, and modernity,
questioning the ways in which sovereignty may be conceived to
reinforce the limitations of human societies and yet seek the
greater good. In the third section of the book, entitled
"Sovereignty in Context", three essays extend her analysis of
sovereignty to different contexts - Latin America, the Islamic
world, and the international system as a whole, all the while
demonstrating the importance of how religious interpretation
contributes to our understanding of political power.
The common goal of the contributors is to illuminate sexuality as a crucial site of conflict and dissent both within and between religious traditions. Thus, we have a collection of ten essays on themes emerging from the social scientific study of religion and sexuality in an array of cultural contexts. Together the essays examine four themes: 1) fecundism as an ideology of reproduction, 2) sexual identity and the life cycle, 3) binary sexual categories, and 4) relations of power and domination.
Spanning thousands of years, this new collection brings together
writings and teachings about sex, marriage, and family from the
Jewish, Christian, Islamic, Hindu, Buddhist, and Confucian
traditions. The volume includes traditional texts as well as
contemporary materials showing how the religions have responded to
the changing conditions and mores of modern life. It reveals the
similarities and differences among the various religions and the
development of ideas and teachings within each tradition.
Selections shed light on each religion's views on a range of
subjects, including sexuality and sexual pleasure, the meaning and
purpose of marriage, the role of betrothal, the status of women,
the place of romance, grounds for divorce, celibacy, and sexual
deviance.
Separate chapters devoted to each religion include introductions
by leading scholars that contextualize the readings. The selections
are drawn from a variety of genres including ritual, legal,
theological, poetic, and mythic texts. The volume contains such
diverse examples as the Zohar on conjugal manners, a contemporary
Episcopalian liturgy for same-sex unions, Qur'anic passages on the
equality of the sexes, the Ka--masu--tra on husbands, wives, and
lovers, Buddhist writings on celibacy, and Confucian teachings on
filial piety.
Contributors include: Michael S. Berger, Emory University;
Azizah Y. al-Hibri, Richmond School of Law; Alan Cole, Lewis and
Clark College; Paul B. Courtright, Emory University; Patricia
Buckley Ebrey, University of Washington; Raja M. El-Habti, Muslim
Women Lawyers for Human Rights; Luke Timothy Johnson, Emory
University; Mark D. Jordan, Emory University
The relationship between religion and human rights is complex and
problematic throughout the world. Most of the world's religions
have been used for violence, repression, and prejudice. Yet each of
these religions can play a crucial role in the modern struggle for
universal human rights. Human rights depend upon the values of
human communities to give them content, coherence, and concrete
manifestation. Religions have constantly provided the sources and
scales of dignity and responsibility, shame and respect, restraint
and regret, and restitution and reconciliation that a human rights
regime needs to survive and flourish. This volume provides
authoritative examinations of the contributions to human rights of
Judaism, Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, Confucianism, Buddhism, and
indigenous religions. Each chapter grapples with the concept and
origins of "human rights, " and offers insight into the major human
rights issues that confront religious individuals and communities.
These include core issues of freedom of religious conscience,
choice, exercise, expression, association, morality, and
self-determination. They also include analysis of the roles of
religious ideas and institutions in the cultivation and abridgement
of rights of women, children, and minorities, and rights to peace,
orderly development, and protection of nature and the environment.
With contributions by a score of leading experts, Religion and
Human Rights offers a wealth of knowledge and analysis for
understanding the contributions to human rights and the challenges
faced by the world's religions.
The relationship between religion and human rights is complex and
problematic throughout the world. Most of the world's religions
have been used for violence, repression, and prejudice. Yet each of
these religions can play a crucial role in the modern struggle for
universal human rights. Human rights depend upon the values of
human communities to give them content, coherence, and concrete
manifestation. Religions have constantly provided the sources and
scales of dignity and responsibility, shame and respect, restraint
and regret, and restitution and reconciliation that a human rights
regime needs to survive and flourish. This volume provides
authoritative examinations of the contributions to human rights of
Judaism, Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, Confucianism, Buddhism, and
indigenous religions. Each chapter grapples with the concept and
origins of "human rights, " and offers insight into the major human
rights issues that confront religious individuals and communities.
These include core issues of freedom of religious conscience,
choice, exercise, expression, association, morality, and
self-determination. They also include analysis of the roles of
religious ideas and institutions in the cultivation and abridgement
of rights of women, children, and minorities, and rights to peace,
orderly development, and protection of nature and the environment.
With contributions by a score of leading experts, Religion and
Human Rights offers a wealth of knowledge and analysis for
understanding the contributions to human rights and the challenges
faced by the world's religions.
Security is a key topic of our time. But how do we understand it?
Do law and religion take different views of it? In this fifth
volume in the Law and Religion in Africa series, radicalisation,
terrorism, blasphemy, hate speech, religious freedom and just war
theories rub shoulders with issues of witchcraft, female genital
mutilation circumcision, child marriage, displaced communities and
additional issues besides. This unique collection of topics is both
challenging and inspiring, providing illumination in troubled
times, and forming a sound foundation for future scholarship.
What is heritage in Africa? Who defines and authorises heritage? Is
heritage limited to tangible forms of land, resources and
monuments, or do intangible forms of heritage, such as cultural and
religious heritage, count equally or even more? How is heritage
managed, appropriated, expropriated and commodified by the
government and state, by heritage experts and professionals, and by
religious and ethnic groups in service of cultural and tourism
industries and in the construction of national and other group
identities? How is heritage shaped by Africa’s religious and ethnic
pluralism, its colonial past and its postcolonial trajectories?
Finally, how can heritage serve as a means toward social, cultural
and political development? These are just some of the many issues
and questions addressed in this volume by scholars in law, religion
and related fields.
Africa continues to be a region with strong commitments to
religious freedom and religious pluralism. These, however, are
rarely mere facts on the ground – they are legal, political,
social, and theological projects that require considerable effort
to realise. This volume – compiling the proceedings of the third
annual conference of the African Consortium for Law and Religion
Studies – focuses on various issues which vastly effect the
understanding of religious pluralism in Africa. These include,
amongst others, religious freedom as a human right, the importance
of managing religious pluralism, and the permissibility of
religious practice and observance in South African public schools.
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