Sexual difference, gender, and agency in Karl Barth's Church dogmatics

This volume is a critical and constructive analysis of the sexually differentiated self in Karl Barth's Church Dogmatic. It secures in his Christocentric pattern of human agency an untapped resource for unsettling and reimagining the heteropatriarchal structure of human fellowship at the heart...

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Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor principal: Bodley-Dangelo, Faye (Author)
Tipo de documento: Print Livro
Idioma:Inglês
Serviço de pedido Subito: Pedir agora.
Verificar disponibilidade: HBZ Gateway
Fernleihe:Fernleihe für die Fachinformationsdienste
Publicado em: London New York Oxford New Delhi Sydney International Clark 2020
Em:Ano: 2020
Coletânea / Revista:T&T Clark explorations in reformed theology
(Cadeias de) Palavra- chave padrão:B Barth, Karl 1886-1968 / Teologia / Ética sexual / Diferenças sexuais / Barth, Karl 1886-1968, Die kirchliche Dogmatik / Sexualidade / Diferenças sexuais
Classificações IxTheo:NBA Dogmática
NBE Antropologia
Outras palavras-chave:B Sex Religious aspects Christianity
B Theology, Doctrinal
B Barth, Karl (1886-1968) Kirchliche Dogmatik
B Theological Anthropology Christianity
Descrição
Resumo:This volume is a critical and constructive analysis of the sexually differentiated self in Karl Barth's Church Dogmatic. It secures in his Christocentric pattern of human agency an untapped resource for unsettling and reimagining the heteropatriarchal structure of human fellowship at the heart of his theological anthropology. Moving through Barth's doctrines of revelation, creation, theological anthropology, and special ethics, Faye Bodley-Dangelo locates the human agent in his broader project aimed at re-habilitating the subject of modern protestant theology. She argues the human actor comes into view as the recipient of Christ's redemptive activity, which redirects it out of self-aggrandizing isolation and into relationships of dependency, responsiveness, and ethical responsibility to multiple sites of divine and creaturely alterity. The book debates that Barth's model of human agency cannot on its own terms sustain his version of female subordination nor his repudiation of same-sex relationships. Rather, it contains ethically-oriented, critical and reflective mechanisms that resist the sexist heterosexist dimension of his theological anthropology and lend themselves to an anti-essentialist performative account of gender.
Descrição do item:Literaturverzeichnis: 182-190
ISBN:0567679306