We use cookies to provide essential features and services. By using our website you agree to our use of cookies .

×

Warehouse Stock Clearance Sale

Grab a bargain today!


Grace Jantzen
By

Rating

Product Description
Product Details

Table of Contents

Contents: Redeeming the present, Elaine Graham; Part 1 'The Gift of Life': Grace Jantzen and the work of love; preamble, Morny Joy; The urgent wish... to be more life-giving, Pamela Sue Anderson; Why I still read John Donne: an appraisal of Grace Jantzen's Becoming Divine, Frances Ward; 'In the name of life!' Psychoanalysis and Grace Jantzen's critique of philosophy, Jeremy Carrette. Part 2 'In the Name of Life': 'Choose life!' Quaker metaphor and modernity, Pam Lunn, Betty Hagglund, Edwina Newman and Ben Pink Dandelion; Searching a feminine mystical way for the 21st century, Ursula King; On Jantzen and theology: a conversation with William Desmond, Clare Greer; Life, death and discernment: Ignatian perspectives, Kate Stogdon. Part 3 'Choose Life!': The metaphysics of the body, Graham Ward; Passion for life: power for building justice and peace, Mary Elizabeth Moore; Natality and Flourishing in the contexts of disability and impairment, Mary Grey; The postnatural as anti-human? Resurrection, natality and creatureliness, Peter Manley Scott; The implications of a politics of natality for transitional feminist advocacy: transforming the human rights moral imaginary, Nanci Hogan; Bibliography; Indexes.

About the Author

Research interests include: Religion, culture and gender; the relationship between social theory and Christian social thought, especially 'public' theology; the nature of theological method in Practical and Contextual Theology; ethical, philosophical and theological implications of new technologies. Publications include: Life-Cycles: Women and Pastoral Care (SPCK, 1993, co-edited with Margaret Halsey), Making the Difference: Gender, Personhood and Theology (Fortress, 1995), Transforming Practice (1996, 2nd Edition, Wipf and Stock 2002), Representations of the Post/human (Rutgers University Press, 2002) and Words Made Flesh: writings in pastoral and practical theology (SCM, 2009). With Heather Walton and Frances Ward, Theological Reflection: Methods (SCM Press, 2005) and Theological Reflection: Sources (2007). Elaine Graham, Morny Joy, Pamela Sue Anderson, Frances Ward, Jeremy Carrette, Pam Lunn, Betty Hagglund, Edwina Newman, Ben Pink Dandelion, Ursula King, Clare Greer, Kate Stogdon, Graham Ward, Mary Elizabeth Moore, Mary Grey, Peter Manley Scott, Nanci Hogan.

Reviews

’Among the perspectives are those of peace/justice building, twenty-first century appreciation of mysticism, disability/impairment, and world politics. This is what good philosophical thinking is meant to do. All the scholars writing in this book have engaged with Jantzen's thinking and asked what it means to their own field and their point of view. More importantly, the book asks how the implications of one woman's teachings can inspire others to apply her insights to new and creative approaches to contemporary issues. It is not only, as the book title says, 'redeeming the present,' but in doing so is also rethinking the future.’ Magistra ’Fourteen essays honour a remarkable career, culminating in a fruitful decade at the University of Manchester before Professor Jantzen died... Hers was a 'voice of dissent', and that of one of the rare species of feminist philosophers of religion, focused on a new vision of human flourishing... The headings of the three sections of the book are themselves informative: 'The Gift of Life', 'In the Name of Life' and 'Choose Life'. There is no shallow optimism here, but the 'practical wisdom' energized by hope and the orientation towards beauty, using 'tools' such as 'deconstruction', some forms of psychoanalysis, and Foucauldian genealogy. Theologians have much to gain from Grace Jantzen's unique approach, as have all those rightly concerned for a new 'politics' for the world we all share.’ Ann Loades, Theology 'There is much interesting material in this wide-ranging collection.' Studies in Christian Ethics '... at the end of the book [Jantzen] moves into a positive project, of changing the imaginary with which we work from one which is focussed on death to one in which we would be fully vulnerable to beauty, and this creative work is both fascinating and potentially fruitful.' Quaker Studies

Ask a Question About this Product More...
 
Look for similar items by category
Item ships from and is sold by Fishpond World Ltd.

Back to top