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Represents some of the best, cutting-edge thinking available on
multiple forms of social upheaval and related grassroots movements.
From the January 2017 Women's March to the August 2017 events in
Charlottesville and the 2020 protests for racial justice in the
wake of George Floyd's murder, social upheaval and protest have
loomed large in the United States in recent years. The varied,
sometimes conflicting role of religious believers, communities, and
institutions in such events and movements calls for scholarly
analysis. Arising from a conference held at the College of the Holy
Cross in November 2017, Religion, Protest, and Social Upheaval
gathers contributions from ten scholars in religious studies,
theology and ethics, and gender studies-from seasoned experts to
emerging voices-to illuminate this tumultuous era of history and
the complex landscape of social action for economic, racial,
political, and sexual and gender justice. The contributors consider
the history of resistance to racial capitalist imperialism from W.
E. B. Du Bois to today; the theological genealogy of the capitalist
economic order, and Catholic theology's growing concern with
climate change; affect theory and the rise of white nationalism,
theological aesthetics, and solidarity with migrants; differing
U.S. Christian churches' responses to the "revolutionary
aesthetics" of the Black Lives Matter movement; Muslim migration
and the postsecular character of Muslim labor organizing in the
United States; shifts in moral reasoning and religiosity among U.S.
women's movements from the 1960s to today; and the intersection of
heresy discourse and struggles for LGBTQ+ equality among Korean and
Korean-American Protestants. With this pluralistic approach,
Religion, Protest, and Social Upheaval offers a snapshot of
scholarly religious responses to the crises and promises of the
late 2010s and early 2020s. Representing the diverse coalitions of
the religious left, it provides groundbreaking analysis, charts
trajectories for further study and action, and offers visions for a
more hopeful future.
Represents some of the best, cutting-edge thinking available on
multiple forms of social upheaval and related grassroots movements.
From the January 2017 Women's March to the August 2017 events in
Charlottesville and the 2020 protests for racial justice in the
wake of George Floyd's murder, social upheaval and protest have
loomed large in the United States in recent years. The varied,
sometimes conflicting role of religious believers, communities, and
institutions in such events and movements calls for scholarly
analysis. Arising from a conference held at the College of the Holy
Cross in November 2017, Religion, Protest, and Social Upheaval
gathers contributions from ten scholars in religious studies,
theology and ethics, and gender studies-from seasoned experts to
emerging voices-to illuminate this tumultuous era of history and
the complex landscape of social action for economic, racial,
political, and sexual and gender justice. The contributors consider
the history of resistance to racial capitalist imperialism from W.
E. B. Du Bois to today; the theological genealogy of the capitalist
economic order, and Catholic theology's growing concern with
climate change; affect theory and the rise of white nationalism,
theological aesthetics, and solidarity with migrants; differing
U.S. Christian churches' responses to the "revolutionary
aesthetics" of the Black Lives Matter movement; Muslim migration
and the postsecular character of Muslim labor organizing in the
United States; shifts in moral reasoning and religiosity among U.S.
women's movements from the 1960s to today; and the intersection of
heresy discourse and struggles for LGBTQ+ equality among Korean and
Korean-American Protestants. With this pluralistic approach,
Religion, Protest, and Social Upheaval offers a snapshot of
scholarly religious responses to the crises and promises of the
late 2010s and early 2020s. Representing the diverse coalitions of
the religious left, it provides groundbreaking analysis, charts
trajectories for further study and action, and offers visions for a
more hopeful future.
What do we do when a beloved comedian known as 'America's Dad' is
convicted of sexual assault? Or when we discover that the man who
wrote 'all men are created equal' also enslaved hundreds of people?
Or when priests are exposed as pedophiles? From the popular to the
political to the profound, each day brings new revelations that
respected people, traditions, and institutions are not what we
thought they were. Despite the shock that these disclosures
produce, this state of affairs is anything but new. Facing the
concrete task of living well when our best moral resources are not
only contaminated but also potentially corrupting is an enduring
feature of human experience. In this book, Karen V. Guth identifies
'tainted legacies' as a pressing contemporary moral problem and
ethical challenge. Constructing a typology of responses to
compromised thinkers, traditions, and institutions, she
demonstrates the relevance of age-old debates in Christian theology
for those who confront legacies tarnished by the traumas of
slavery, racism, and sexual violence.
In contemporary reflection on Christianity and politics, the work
of realist, witness, and feminist theologians has been done in
isolation-that is, each school has largely pursued its projects
without incorporating the insights of the others. Christian Ethics
at the Boundary offers the first approach to public and political
theology developed at the boundaries that separate these
approaches. Extending the strong contextual work of theologians
like Robin W. Lovin and Stanley Hauerwas on one hand, and Kathryn
Tanner, Monica A. Coleman, and Mary McClintock Fulkerson on the
other, author Karen V. Guth engages the theologies of prominent
public theologians Reinhold Niebuhr, John Howard Yoder, and Martin
Luther King Jr. to identify new trajectories for future work in
Christian ethics. By fostering constructive dialogue between these
pivotal public theologians of the twentieth century, their
contemporary representatives, and the vanguard voices in feminist
and womanist theology, Guth identifies ecclesiology as a new agenda
for realist theologians, feminism as a vital form of Christian
politics for witness theologians, and "creative maladjustment" as a
productive theological stance for all Christian ethicists. In doing
so, the work displays an innovative method that enables a vivid,
collaborative vision of Christian politics.
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