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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Willemien Otten , Susan E. SchreinerPublisher: University of Notre Dame Press Imprint: University of Notre Dame Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.40cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.716kg ISBN: 9780268103453ISBN 10: 0268103453 Pages: 277 Publication Date: 30 May 2018 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsIntroduction: Susan E. Schreiner, Augustine Our Contemporary 1. David W. Tracy, Augustine Our Contemporary: The Overdetermined, Incomprehensible Self 2. Bernard McGinn, Semper agens/Semper quietus: Notes on the History of an Augustinian Theme 3. Vincent Carraud, Pondus meum amor meus, or Contradictory Self-Love 4. Willemien Otten, The Open Self: Augustine and the Early Medieval Ethics of Order 5. Adriaan T. Peperzak, Teachers Without and Within 6. David C. Steinmetz, Luther and Augustine on Romans 9 7. Jean-Luc Marion, St. Augustine, or the Impossibility of Any Ego Cogito 8. W. Clark Gilpin, The Augustinian Strain of Piety: Theology and Autobiography in American History 9. William Schweiker, The Saint and the Humanities 10. Franklin I. Gamwell, The Sources of Temptation 11. Jean Bethke Elshtain, Augustine and Political Theology 12. Fred Lawrence, Cor ad cor loquitur: Augustine’s Influence on Heidegger and Lonergan 13. Françoise Meltzer, Ruins and Time Notes on ContributorsReviewsOtten and Schreiner's volume demonstrates how Augustine's pioneering struggles with the self provided fertile ground for subsequent Western intellectuals to come to their own conclusions about the essence of the human experience. Readers will be surprised at each turn as venerable themes resurface century after century, invested with new meanings and bearings. Rather than identifying a stable, easily recognized, human core, these essays return the issue to the reader in a most fruitful way, where the self remains an ongoing site of questioning whose boundaries are far from easy to determine. --Paul Kolbet, Yale Divinity School This original collection of essays by stellar authors in the field addresses the paradoxical question that animates the best of philosophical and philological inquiry into the future of the religious and theological past: To what current uses can the archive and apparatus of early Christian, patristic, and medieval thought be put, without yielding to anachronistic, myopic, and fundamentally narcissistic appropriations that are the standing temptation of scholars of all generations? Susan E. Schreiner and Willemien Otten frame the project in the most stringent and compelling terms. Their further organization of the material is effective, and the individual articles are well researched, steeped in the thorough analysis and interpretation of primary sources while paying minute attention to the voluminous existing scholarship on Augustine, those who influence him, and those whom he would influence in turn. --Hent de Vries, Paulette Goddard Professor of the Humanities, New York University, and director, School of Criticism and Theory at Cornell University This original collection of essays by stellar authors in the field addresses the paradoxical question that animates the best of philosophical and philological inquiry into the future of the religious and theological past: To what current uses can the archive and apparatus of early Christian, patristic, and medieval thought be put, without yielding to anachronistic, myopic, and fundamentally narcissistic appropriations that are the standing temptation of scholars of all generations? Susan E. Schreiner and Willemien Otten frame the project in the most stringent and compelling terms. Their further organization of the material is effective, and the individual articles are well researched, steeped in the thorough analysis and interpretation of primary sources while paying minute attention to the voluminous existing scholarship on Augustine, those who influence him, and those whom he would influence in turn. -Hent de Vries, Paulette Goddard Professor of the Humanities, New York University, and director, School of Criticism and Theory at Cornell University Willemien Otten and Susan E. Schreiner's volume demonstrates how Augustine's pioneering struggles with the self provided fertile ground for subsequent Western intellectuals to come to their own conclusions about the essence of the human experience. Readers will be surprised at each turn as venerable themes resurface century after century, invested with new meanings and bearings. Rather than identifying a stable, easily recognized, human core, these essays return the issue to the reader in a most fruitful way, where the self remains an ongoing site of questioning whose boundaries are far from easy to determine. -Paul Kolbet, Yale Divinity School The present volume develops several specific themes within the broad Augustinian legacy and thus will be helpful to scholars. -Choice The title of this extraordinary book, Augustine Our Contemporary: Examining the Self in Past and Present, conceals the fact that it is editors' Willemien Otten and Susan E. Schreiner's homage to David Tracy, long time Professor of Theology and the Philosophy of Religion at the University of Chicago Divinity School and the Committee for Social Thought. -Reading Religion Otten and Schreiner's volume demonstrates how Augustine's pioneering struggles with the self provided fertile ground for subsequent Western intellectuals to come to their own conclusions about the essence of the human experience. Readers will be surprised at each turn as venerable themes resurface century after century, invested with new meanings and bearings. Rather than identifying a stable, easily recognized, human core, these essays return the issue to the reader in a most fruitful way, where the self remains an ongoing site of questioning whose boundaries are far from easy to determine. --Paul Kolbet, Yale Divinity School Otten and Schreiner's volume demonstrates how Augustine's pioneering struggles with the self provided fertile ground for subsequent Western intellectuals to come to their own conclusions about the essence of the human experience. Readers will be surprised at each turn as venerable themes resurface century after century, invested with new meanings and bearings. Rather than identifying a stable, easily recognized, human core, these essays return the issue to the reader in a most fruitful way, where the self remains an ongoing site of questioning whose boundaries are far from easy to determine. --Paul Kolbet, Yale Divinity School This original collection of essays by stellar authors in the field addresses the paradoxical question that animates the best of philosophical and philological inquiry into the future of the religious and theological past: To what current uses can the archive and apparatus of early Christian, patristic, and medieval thought be put, without yielding to anachronistic, myopic, and fundamentally narcissistic appropriations that are the standing temptation of scholars of all generations? Susan E. Schreiner and Willemien Otten frame the project in the most stringent and compelling terms. Their further organization of the material is effective, and the individual articles are well researched, steeped in the thorough analysis and interpretation of primary sources while paying minute attention to the voluminous existing scholarship on Augustine, those who influence him, and those whom he would influence in turn. --Hent de Vries, Paulette Goddard Professor of the Humanities, New York University, and director, School of Criticism and Theory at Cornell University The present volume develops several specific themes within the broad Augustinian legacy and thus will be helpful to scholars. --Choice This original collection of essays by stellar authors in the field addresses the paradoxical question that animates the best of philosophical and philological inquiry into the future of the religious and theological past: To what current uses can the archive and apparatus of early Christian, patristic, and medieval thought be put, without yielding to anachronistic, myopic, and fundamentally narcissistic appropriations that are the standing temptation of scholars of all generations? Susan E. Schreiner and Willemien Otten frame the project in the most stringent and compelling terms. Their further organization of the material is effective, and the individual articles are well researched, steeped in the thorough analysis and interpretation of primary sources while paying minute attention to the voluminous existing scholarship on Augustine, those who influence him, and those whom he would influence in turn. -- Hent de Vries, Paulette Goddard Professor of the Humanities, New York University, and director, School of Criticism and Theory at Cornell University The title of this extraordinary book, Augustine Our Contemporary: Examining the Self in Past and Present, conceals the fact that it is editors' Willemien Otten and Susan E. Schreiner's homage to David Tracy, long time Professor of Theology and the Philosophy of Religion at the University of Chicago Divinity School and the Committee for Social Thought. -- <i>Reading Religion</i> Otten and Schreiner's volume demonstrates how Augustine's pioneering struggles with the self provided fertile ground for subsequent Western intellectuals to come to their own conclusions about the essence of the human experience. Readers will be surprised at each turn as venerable themes resurface century after century, invested with new meanings and bearings. Rather than identifying a stable, easily recognized, human core, these essays return the issue to the reader in a most fruitful way, where the self remains an ongoing site of questioning whose boundaries are far from easy to determine. -- Paul Kolbet, Yale Divinity School The present volume develops several specific themes within the broad Augustinian legacy and thus will be helpful to scholars. -- <i>Choice</i> Author InformationWillemien Otten is professor of theology and the history of Christianity at the University of Chicago Divinity School and the College. She also directs the Martin Marty Center for the Public Understanding of Religion. Susan E. Schreiner is professor of theology and the history of Christianity at the University of Chicago Divinity School and the College. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |