9781498280822-149828082X-A Theology of Race and Place: Liberation and Reconciliation in the Works of Jennings and Carter

A Theology of Race and Place: Liberation and Reconciliation in the Works of Jennings and Carter

ISBN-13: 9781498280822
ISBN-10: 149828082X
Author: Andrew T. Draper
Publication date: 2016
Publisher: Pickwick Publications
Format: Paperback 348 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9781498280822
ISBN-10: 149828082X
Author: Andrew T. Draper
Publication date: 2016
Publisher: Pickwick Publications
Format: Paperback 348 pages

Summary

A Theology of Race and Place: Liberation and Reconciliation in the Works of Jennings and Carter (ISBN-13: 9781498280822 and ISBN-10: 149828082X), written by authors Andrew T. Draper, was published by Pickwick Publications in 2016. With an overall rating of 4.4 stars, it's a notable title among other Christian Living (Christian Books & Bibles) books. You can easily purchase or rent A Theology of Race and Place: Liberation and Reconciliation in the Works of Jennings and Carter (Paperback) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used Christian Living books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.3.

Description

In a world marked by the effects of colonial displacements, slavery's auction block, and the modern observatory stance, can Christian theology adequately imagine racial reconciliation? What factors have created our society's racialized optic--a view by which nonwhite bodies are objectified, marginalized, and destroyed--and how might such a gaze be resisted? Is there hope for a church and academy marked by difference rather than assimilation? This book pursues these questions by surveying the works of Willie James Jennings and J. Kameron Carter, who investigate the genesis of the racial imagination to suggest a new path forward for Christian theology. Jennings and Carter both mount critiques of popular contemporary ways of theologically imagining Christian identity as a return to an ethic of virtue. Through fresh reads of both the "tradition" and liberation theology, these scholars point to the particular Jewish flesh of Jesus Christ as the ground for a new body politic. By drawing on a vast array of biblical, theological, historical, and sociological resources, including communal experiments in radical joining, A Theology of Race and Place builds upon their theological race theory by offering an ecclesiology of joining that resists the aesthetic hegemony of whiteness.

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