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Overview"In this book, B. Jill Carroll uses the nature writing of Annie Dillard and the philosophical categories of Emmanual Levinas to critique the models of God that drive contemporary political theologies, especially feminist and liberation theologies. These political theologies ignore the amoral and often harsh aspects of our existence in the natural world, even though they often align God with the cosmos. Political theologies excise from their models of God all notions of violence, indifference to social justice or general amorality in favour of models that support and advance specific social, political and economic ideologies. Such ""domestication"" of God does not do justice to the hard facts of our existence in the natural world, nor does it fully plumb the depths of using nature to metaphorize God. Furthermore, Carroll argues that current political models of God do not survive the most important critiques of religion in the modern era, namely those levelled by Feuerbach, Freud and Nietzsche. Instead, the ""God of the oppressed"" stands tall among any number of gods that exist primarily as projections of our best selves, illusions rooted in wish fulfilment, and attempts to further our o ""The Savage Side"" offes us a glimpse of a natural theology uninterested in apologetics, but thoroughly obsessed with using the natural world as a springboard for describing God. The God that emerges is wildly beautiful, terrifyingly indifferent to political or moral ideology, the consummate Other, and the ultimate ground of our being. This book demands to be read by anyone interested in the relationship between religion and politics, especially those who have given themselves to the cause of social justice in the name of God. Readers will be challenged to let go of comfortable, but outdated notions of deity despite their convenience for the advancement of certain social and political goals, like gay and lesbian rights, women's rights, or third world liberation. Indeed, the claim that ""God is on our side"" emerges as the most problematic claim of contemporary constructive theology." Full Product DetailsAuthor: Jill B. CarrollPublisher: Rowman & Littlefield Imprint: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers Dimensions: Width: 15.10cm , Height: 1.10cm , Length: 23.10cm Weight: 0.213kg ISBN: 9780742512825ISBN 10: 0742512827 Pages: 136 Publication Date: 22 January 2002 Audience: General/trade , Professional and scholarly , General , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Paperback 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 ContentsReviewsThis book articulates an important corrective to a dominant 'model of God'. Most importantly, it charts a fresh trajectory for natural theology-one that, interestingly enough, has far more in common with the God we meet in biblical texts than the one whitewashed by our moral and political pieties. Theology Today Her [Carrol's] critique is broadly persuasive. Journal of Religion This book demands to be read by anyone, regardless of their religious, political, or ethnic identity, interested in the relationship between religion and politics. Not all readers will agree with all of Carroll's perceptions but most will by stirred by the depth of her God-wrestling as well as by her skillful exploration of how surprisingly intertwined secular literature and philosophy are with divinity's challenge and summons to humanity. Even those deeply discomfited by her unwavering message will be struck by the unsettling beauty of her close readings of Dillard and Levinas, surely two of the most robust thinkers of the late twentieth century. It is a boldly confrontational work and a great challenge to us all. Religion and Literature This book articulates an important corrective to a dominant 'model of God'. Most importantly, it charts a fresh trajectory for natural theology--one that, interestingly enough, has far more in common with the God we meet in biblical texts than the one whitewashed by our moral and political pieties. Theology Today Her [Carrol's] critique is broadly persuasive. Journal Of Religion This book demands to be read by anyone, regardless of their religious, political, or ethnic identity, interested in the relationship between religion and politics. Not all readers will agree with all of Carroll's perceptions but most will by stirred by the depth of her God-wrestling as well as by her skillful exploration of how surprisingly intertwined secular literature and philosophy are with divinity's challenge and summons to humanity. Even those deeply discomfited by her unwavering message will be struck by the unsettling beauty of her close readings of Dillard and Levinas, surely two of the most robust thinkers of the late twentieth century. It is a boldly confrontational work and a great challenge to us all. Religion and Literature Author InformationB. Jill Carroll is professor of religious studies at Rice University in Houston, Texas. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |