|
![]() |
|||
|
||||
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Celia Deane-Drummond , Sigurd Bergmann , Markus VogtPublisher: James Clarke & Co Ltd Imprint: Lutterworth Press Dimensions: Width: 15.30cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.531kg ISBN: 9780718895389ISBN 10: 071889538 Pages: 362 Publication Date: 27 September 2018 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback 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 ContentsList of Figures Foreword: The Anthropocene as a Challenge for Public Theology - Heinrich Bedford-Strohm Acknowledgments Contributors The Future of Religion in the Anthropocene Era - Celia Deane-Drummond, Sigurd Bergmann, and Markus Vogt Part 1: Setting the Stage 1 On Going Gently into the Anthropocene - Michael Northcott 2 From the Anthropocene Epoch to a New Axial Age: Using Theory-Fictions to Explore Geo-Spiritual Futures - Bronislaw Szerszynski 3 Transformations of Stewardship in the Anthropocene - Christoph Baumgartner 4 Religion at Work within Climate Change: Eight Perceptions about Its Where and How - Sigurd Bergmann Part 2: Historical Matters 5 Bridging the Great Divide: The Anthropocene as a Challenge to the Social Sciences and Humanities - Franz Mauelshagen 6 Becoming Human in the Anthropocene - Agustín Fuentes Part 3: Philosophical Analyses 7 De-moralizing and Re-moralizing the Anthropocene - Maria Antonaccio 8 Anthropocene Fever: Memory and the Planetary Archive - Stefan Skrimshire 9 Reconsidering the Anthropocene as Milieu: William Desmond and the Originary Goodness of Being - Francis Van den Noortgaete Part 4: Theological Trajectories 10 Performing the Beginning in the End: A Theological Anthropology for the Anthropocene - Celia Deane-Drummond 11 Cooled Down Love and an Overheated Atmosphere: René Girard on Ecology and Apocalypticism in the Anthropocene - Petra Steinmair-Pösel 12 Beyond Human Exceptionalism: Christology in the Anthropocene - Matthew Eaton 13 American Evangelicalism, Apocalypticism, and the Anthropocene - Marisa Ronan Part 5: Ethical Deliberations 14 Human Ecology as a Key Discipline of Environmental Ethics in the Anthropocene - Markus Vogt 15 Protection of Threatened Species in the Anthropocene: A Theological-Ethical Perspective - Anders Melin Part 6: Sociopolitical Transformations 16 Contesting the Good Life of Technological Modernity in the Anthropocene - Ian Barns 17 The Anthropocene and the Future of Diplomacy: Religion, Ecology, and Transnational Relations in the Age of Human Responsibility - David Joseph Wellman Bibliography General IndexReviews'Interpreting what it means to live in a time characterized by pervasive human influence throughout Earth's systems involves questions and narratives that appear religious in scope, even while they also challenge conventional religious thought. The essays in this collection, edited well so that they are both coherent and helpfully contradictory with one another, offer readers multiple ways into the conflicts and possibilities in the idea of the Anthropocene.' - Willis Jenkins, Associate Professor of Religious Studies, University of Virginia 'This timely book takes the notion of the Anthropocene literally by providing historical, theological, philosophical, and ethical elaborations on what it actually means that humanity has become a dominant force of the earth system. It is a scholarly account of the deeper human dimensions of the Anthropocene, moving beyond its predominating framing as a natural science phenomenon.' - Dieter Gerten, earth system scientist, Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, professor, Humboldt-Universitat zu Berlin, Geography Department 'Religion in the Anthropocene marks the first thorough treatment of religious and quasi-religious dimensions of the Anthropocene from perspectives as diverse as philosophy, theology, anthropology, and history, among others. This impressive collection of international scholarly voices aims not at consensus or easy answers, but fully explores the Anthropocene's profoundly ambivalent implications for humanity's place in nature and deep time, and our responsibilities for nonhuman others. Readers new to the topic, as well as scholars in the field, will come away with fresh--and sometimes disconcerting--insights into what it means to be human in the Age of Humans.' - Lisa H. Sideris, Associate Professor of Religious Studies, Indiana University 'Interpreting what it means to live in a time characterized by pervasive human influence throughout Earth's systems involves questions and narratives that appear religious in scope, even while they also challenge conventional religious thought. The essays in this collection, edited well so that they are both coherent and helpfully contradictory with one another, offer readers multiple ways into the conflicts and possibilities in the idea of the Anthropocene.'- Willis Jenkins, Associate Professor of Religious Studies, University of Virginia'This timely book takes the notion of the Anthropocene literally by providing historical, theological, philosophical, and ethical elaborations on what it actually means that humanity has become a dominant force of the earth system. It is a scholarly account of the deeper human dimensions of the Anthropocene, moving beyond its predominating framing as a natural science phenomenon.'- Dieter Gerten, earth system scientist, Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, professor, Humboldt-Universitat zu Berlin, Geography Department'Religion in the Anthropocene marks the first thorough treatment of religious and quasi-religious dimensions of the Anthropocene from perspectives as diverse as philosophy, theology, anthropology, and history, among others. This impressive collection of international scholarly voices aims not at consensus or easy answers, but fully explores the Anthropocene's profoundly ambivalent implications for humanity's place in nature and deep time, and our responsibilities for nonhuman others. Readers new to the topic, as well as scholars in the field, will come away with fresh--and sometimes disconcerting--insights into what it means to be human in the Age of Humans.'- Lisa H. Sideris, Associate Professor of Religious Studies, Indiana University Laudato Si, this document receives a fair bit of attention in this book, which is not surprising given it-s influence, but this widespread attention is a turn of events in the world of scholarship that could not have been predicted a decade ago. This book is an important rejoinder to the scientifically dominant discourse that surrounds the concept of the anthropocene. This book is recommended.-Paul Allen, Corpus Christi College, Vancouver, Canada 'Interpreting what it means to live in a time characterized by pervasive human influence throughout Earth's systems involves questions and narratives that appear religious in scope, even while they also challenge conventional religious thought. The essays in this collection, edited well so that they are both coherent and helpfully contradictory with one another, offer readers multiple ways into the conflicts and possibilities in the idea of the Anthropocene.' - Willis Jenkins, Associate Professor of Religious Studies, University of Virginia 'This timely book takes the notion of the Anthropocene literally by providing historical, theological, philosophical, and ethical elaborations on what it actually means that humanity has become a dominant force of the earth system. It is a scholarly account of the deeper human dimensions of the Anthropocene, moving beyond its predominating framing as a natural science phenomenon.' - Dieter Gerten, earth system scientist, Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, professor, Humboldt-Universitat zu Berlin, Geography Department 'Religion in the Anthropocene marks the first thorough treatment of religious and quasi-religious dimensions of the Anthropocene from perspectives as diverse as philosophy, theology, anthropology, and history, among others. This impressive collection of international scholarly voices aims not at consensus or easy answers, but fully explores the Anthropocene's profoundly ambivalent implications for humanity's place in nature and deep time, and our responsibilities for nonhuman others. Readers new to the topic, as well as scholars in the field, will come away with fresh--and sometimes disconcerting--insights into what it means to be human in the Age of Humans.' - Lisa H. Sideris, Associate Professor of Religious Studies, Indiana University Laudato Si, this document receives a fair bit of attention in this book, which is not surprising given it-s influence, but this widespread attention is a turn of events in the world of scholarship that could not have been predicted a decade ago. This book is an important rejoinder to the scientifically dominant discourse that surrounds the concept of the anthropocene. This book is recommended. -Paul Allen, Corpus Christi College, Vancouver, Canada Author InformationCelia Deane-Drummond is Professor of Theology and Director of the Center for Theology, Science and Human Flourishing at the University of Notre Dame. Her recent books include The Wisdom of the Liminal (2014), Technofutures, Nature, and the Sacred (coeditor, 2015) and Ecology in Jurgen Moltmann's Theology. Sigurd Bergmann is Professor of Religious Studies in the Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology in Trondheim, Norway. His recent books include Religion, Space, and the Environment (2014) and Technofutures, Nature, and the Sacred (coeditor, 2015). Markus Vogt is Professor of Christian Social Ethics at Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, Germany. His recent books include Prinzip Nachhaltigkeit (3rd ed. 2013) Wo steht die Umweltethik? (coeditor 2013), and Die Welt des Anthropozän (coeditor 2016). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |