God Keep Our Land?: Unsettling Christian Theology

Jamaican novelist and critic Sylvia Wynter famously wrote that "the central mechanism at work" in processes of colonization "was and is that of representation." Canadian theology is becoming ever more responsive to Wynter’s call as it thinks through the manner in which the mechan...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Barter Moulaison, Jane 1969- (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: School 2022
In: Toronto journal of theology
Year: 2022, Volume: 38, Issue: 2, Pages: 167-177
Further subjects:B Theological Education
B Theology
B Feminism
B Continental Philosophy
B Indigenous Theology
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Summary:Jamaican novelist and critic Sylvia Wynter famously wrote that "the central mechanism at work" in processes of colonization "was and is that of representation." Canadian theology is becoming ever more responsive to Wynter’s call as it thinks through the manner in which the mechanism of theological representation supported and continues to support colonization. This is the challenge that I, too, wish to take up, and I will do so through thinking about how we represent time within settler colonialism, and how our understanding of time and its redemption is, in fact, deeply invested with theological suppositions that afflict both Canadian and Canadian theological understandings of the time of reconciliation.
ISSN:1918-6371
Contains:Enthalten in: Toronto journal of theology
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.3138/tjt.2022-0028