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Exercises in New Creation from Paul to Kierkegaard / by T. Wilson Dickinson.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Radical Theologies and PhilosophiesPublisher: Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan, 2018Edition: 1st ed. 2018Description: 1 online resource (X, 276 pages)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9783319978437
  • 9783319978420
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Print version:: Exercises in new creation from Paul to Kierkegaard.; Printed edition:: No title; Printed edition:: No title; Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification:
  • N26.5 23 D560
Contents:
Chapter 1 Introduction: Care of the Self, City, and Creation -- Chapter 2 Reading Paul in Radical, Late Ancient, and Prophetic Perspective -- Chapter 3 Wisdom: Paul's Exercises of Care for a Commercialized Corinth -- Chapter 4 The Cross: The Slow Violence of Gentlemen and the Wisdom of Self-Giving Love -- Chapter 5 Exercises: Paul's Practices of Reading and Writing for Social Transformation -- Chapter 6 New Creation: Pauline Social Experiments for Love and Justice -- Chapter 7 Pauline Resonances in Luther, Derrida, and Kierkegaard -- Chapter 8 The Writing of Creatures: The Environmentality of Confessions in Derrida and Augustine -- Chapter 9 The Caregiver of Copenhagen: Kierkegaard's Re-Education of the Age of Information -- Chapter 10 Caring for Creatures: Kierkegaard's Exercises for a Simple Way of Life -- Chapter 11 Conclusion: Reading and Writing for Sustainability.
Summary: This book unfolds a vision for philosophical theology centered on the practices of the care of the self, the city, and creation. Rooted in Paul's articulation of the wisdom of the cross, and in conversation with ecological, radical, and political theologies; continental philosophy; and political ecology, it addresses the challenge of injustice and ecological catastrophe. Part one reads 1 Corinthians as an exercise in reading and writing that shapes and changes relationships and capabilities. Part two follows this alternative path for theology through Derrida and Kierkegaard, and neglected trajectories in Origen, Augustine, and Luther. Along the way, reading and writing are explored as exercises that transform selves, communities, and even habitats. They are creaturely acts that can scandalize the dominant orders of consumption and competition for the ends of love and justice. This is a philosophical theology engaged with political ecology, exercises that help cultivate new creation.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Books Books DVK Library Stack -> Second Floor -> N N26.5 D560 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 11070800

Chapter 1 Introduction: Care of the Self, City, and Creation -- Chapter 2 Reading Paul in Radical, Late Ancient, and Prophetic Perspective -- Chapter 3 Wisdom: Paul's Exercises of Care for a Commercialized Corinth -- Chapter 4 The Cross: The Slow Violence of Gentlemen and the Wisdom of Self-Giving Love -- Chapter 5 Exercises: Paul's Practices of Reading and Writing for Social Transformation -- Chapter 6 New Creation: Pauline Social Experiments for Love and Justice -- Chapter 7 Pauline Resonances in Luther, Derrida, and Kierkegaard -- Chapter 8 The Writing of Creatures: The Environmentality of Confessions in Derrida and Augustine -- Chapter 9 The Caregiver of Copenhagen: Kierkegaard's Re-Education of the Age of Information -- Chapter 10 Caring for Creatures: Kierkegaard's Exercises for a Simple Way of Life -- Chapter 11 Conclusion: Reading and Writing for Sustainability.

This book unfolds a vision for philosophical theology centered on the practices of the care of the self, the city, and creation. Rooted in Paul's articulation of the wisdom of the cross, and in conversation with ecological, radical, and political theologies; continental philosophy; and political ecology, it addresses the challenge of injustice and ecological catastrophe. Part one reads 1 Corinthians as an exercise in reading and writing that shapes and changes relationships and capabilities. Part two follows this alternative path for theology through Derrida and Kierkegaard, and neglected trajectories in Origen, Augustine, and Luther. Along the way, reading and writing are explored as exercises that transform selves, communities, and even habitats. They are creaturely acts that can scandalize the dominant orders of consumption and competition for the ends of love and justice. This is a philosophical theology engaged with political ecology, exercises that help cultivate new creation.

Description based on publisher-supplied MARC data.

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