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If scholars no longer necessarily find the essence and origins of
what came to be known as Christianity in the personality of a
historical figure known as Jesus of Nazareth, it nevertheless
remains the case that the study of early Christianity is dominated
by an assumption of the force of Jesus's personality on divergent
communities. In The Godman and the Sea, Michael J. Thate shifts the
terms of this study by focusing on the Gospel of Mark, which ends
when Mary Magdalene, Mary the mother of James, and Salome discover
a few days after the crucifixion that Jesus's tomb has been opened
but the corpse is not there. Unlike the other gospels, Mark does
not include the resurrection, portraying instead loss, puzzlement,
and despair in the face of the empty tomb. Reading Mark's Gospel as
an exemplary text, Thate examines what he considers to be
retellings of other traumatic experiences-the stories of Jesus's
exorcising demons out of a man and into a herd of swine, his
stilling of the storm, and his walking on the water. Drawing widely
on a diverse set of resources that include the canon of western
fiction, classical literature, the psychological study of trauma,
phenomenological philosophy, the new materialism, psychoanalytic
theory, poststructural philosophy, and Hebrew Bible scholarship, as
well as the expected catalog of New Testament tools of biblical
criticism in general and Markan scholarship in particular, The
Godman and the Sea is an experimental reading of the Gospel of Mark
and the social force of the sea within its traumatized world. More
fundamentally, however, it attempts to position this reading as a
story of trauma, ecstasy, and what has become through the ruins of
past pain.
In the 1940s and 1950s, Albert Schweitzer was one of the best-known
figures on the world stage. Courted by monarchs, world statesmen,
and distinguished figures from the literary, musical, and
scientific fields, Schweitzer was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in
1952, cementing his place as one of the great intellectual leaders
of his time. Schweitzer is less well known now but nonetheless a
man of perennial fascination, and this volume seeks to bring his
achievements across a variety of areas-philosophy, theology, and
medicine-into sharper focus. To that end, international scholars
from diverse disciplines offer a wideranging examination of
Schweitzer's life and thought over the course of forty years.
Albert Schweitzer in Thought and Action gives readers a fuller,
richer, and more nuanced picture of this controversial but
monumental figure of twentieth-century life-and, in some measure,
of that complex century itself.
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