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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: S. Lily Mendoza , George ZachariahPublisher: Wipf & Stock Publishers Imprint: Wipf & Stock Publishers Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.90cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.590kg ISBN: 9781725286412ISBN 10: 1725286416 Pages: 312 Publication Date: 18 February 2022 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviews"""A splendidly creative religious response to the planetary emergency that closes in upon us. These essays from voices everywhere are radical in all the right ways. May their tribe increase, quickly!"" --Larry Rasmussen, Union Theological Seminary, emeritus ""There has long been talk that the shift in the geographic center of gravity in world Christianity will also change the landscape of Christian theology. With this volume, such change becomes clearly evident. Here we find conversation across the many global divides but from a point of departure amid those resisting the 'CO2lonization' of land, oceans, and climate."" --Ernst Conradie, University of the Western Cape ""This is a bold intervention in ecotheology, which often neglects Indigenous and subaltern perspectives and politics. It provides new vocabularies, semantics, and visions for theology and fresh approaches to rituals and practices. This is essential reading for decolonizing our minds and habits and for new insights to fight climate crisis."" --Kwok Pui-lan, Candler School of Theology, Emory University" A splendidly creative religious response to the planetary emergency that closes in upon us. These essays from voices everywhere are radical in all the right ways. May their tribe increase, quickly! --Larry Rasmussen, Union Theological Seminary, emeritus There has long been talk that the shift in the geographic center of gravity in world Christianity will also change the landscape of Christian theology. With this volume, such change becomes clearly evident. Here we find conversation across the many global divides but from a point of departure amid those resisting the 'CO2lonization' of land, oceans, and climate. --Ernst Conradie, University of the Western Cape This is a bold intervention in ecotheology, which often neglects Indigenous and subaltern perspectives and politics. It provides new vocabularies, semantics, and visions for theology and fresh approaches to rituals and practices. This is essential reading for decolonizing our minds and habits and for new insights to fight climate crisis. --Kwok Pui-lan, Candler School of Theology, Emory University A splendidly creative religious response to the planetary emergency that closes in upon us. These essays from voices everywhere are radical in all the right ways. May their tribe increase, quickly! --Larry Rasmussen, Union Theological Seminary, emeritus There has long been talk that the shift in the geographic center of gravity in world Christianity will also change the landscape of Christian theology. With this volume, such change becomes clearly evident. Here we find conversation across the many global divides but from a point of departure amid those resisting the 'CO2lonization' of land, oceans, and climate. --Ernst Conradie, University of the Western Cape This is a bold intervention in ecotheology, which often neglects Indigenous and subaltern perspectives and politics. It provides new vocabularies, semantics, and visions for theology and fresh approaches to rituals and practices. This is essential reading for decolonizing our minds and habits and for new insights to fight climate crisis. --Kwok Pui-lan, Candler School of Theology, Emory University A splendidly creative religious response to the planetary emergency that closes in upon us. These essays from voices everywhere are radical in all the right ways. May their tribe increase, quickly! --Larry Rasmussen, Union Theological Seminary, emeritus There has long been talk that the shift in the geographic center of gravity in world Christianity will also change the landscape of Christian theology. With this volume, such change becomes clearly evident. Here we find conversation across the many global divides but from a point of departure amid those resisting the 'CO2lonization' of land, oceans, and climate. --Ernst Conradie, University of the Western Cape This is a bold intervention in ecotheology, which often neglects Indigenous and subaltern perspectives and politics. It provides new vocabularies, semantics, and visions for theology and fresh approaches to rituals and practices. This is essential reading for decolonizing our minds and habits and for new insights to fight climate crisis. --Kwok Pui-lan, Candler School of Theology, Emory University Author InformationS. Lily Mendoza is Professor of Culture and Communication at Oakland University in Rochester, Michigan, and Executive Director of the Center for Babaylan Studies, a movement for decolonization and indigenization among diasporic Filipinos. Her publications include Between the Homeland and the Diaspora (2002; Philippine ed., 2006), and Back from the Crocodile's Belly (coeditor, 2013; Philippine ed., 2015). George Zachariah is Wesley Lecturer in Theological Studies at the Trinity Methodist Theological College in Auckland, New Zealand. His publications include The Word Becoming Flesh (2021), Faith-Based Health Justice (coeditor, 2021), and Alternatives Unincorporated (2014). 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