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What are the implications of adopting a primacy of praxis position in feminist theology? How can we respect the diversity of women’s experience while retaining it as a useful analytic category? Do these twin resources of women’s experience and praxis together imply that feminist theology is ultimately relativist? Through an analysis of the work of some of today’s key feminist theologians – Christian, womanist and post-Christian – Linda Hogan considers these and other methodological questions.
Linda Hogan is Vice-Provost and Chief Academic Officer and Professor of Ecumenics at Trinity College Dublin, Ireland.
ForewordAbbreviationsIntroductionPart I – Origins of the Primary Categories of Feminist Theology1. Women’s Experience from De Beauvoir to McCarthy Brown2. Praxis: The Theological BackgroundPart II – Primary Categories Employed3. Christian Feminists and the Categories of Women’s Experience and Praxis4. Womanist Theologians’ Employment of the Primary Categories5. Women’s Experience and Praxis in the Thealogies of Post-Christian FeministsConclusion – A Theology for the FutureBibliographyIndex of NamesIndex of Subjects
Cathriona Russell, Linda Hogan, Maureen Junker-Kenny, Dublin City University.) Russell, Cathriona (Cathriona Russell is Adjunct Assistant Professor in the School of Religions and Theology at Trinity College Dublin and Director of the Masters in Ecology and Religion at All Hallows College, where she also holds the Chair in Ecumenics.) Hogan, Linda (Linda Hogan is Vice-Provost and Chief Academic Officer at Trinity College Dublin, Trinity College Dublin.) Junker-Kenny, Maureen (Maureen Junker-Kenny is Associate Professor of Theology in the Department of Religions and Theology
Nigel Biggar, Linda Hogan, and Public Life at the University of Oxford) Biggar, Nigel (Regius Professor of Moral and Pastoral Theology and Director of the McDonald Centre for Theology, Ethics, Trinity College Dublin) Hogan, Linda (Professor of Ecumenics and Head of School, Irish School of Ecumenics