Using a coordinated reading of Edward Schillebeeckx’s theology of creation and Theodor Adorno’s critical theory, Elizabeth Pyne shows that nature and politics are co-implicated sites of struggle against ideology and domination. It is this ‘suspended’ concept of nature that sets this volume apart from other ecotheological studies.By ‘suspending’ nature, Pyne uncovers exceptionally robust connections between ecological responsibility and liberative social critique. Including chapters on the relation between theological anthropology and political ecology, as well as key concepts drawn from Schillebeeckx and Adorno. Pyne uses these concepts to develop a constructive rendering of human beings as ecopolitical subjects. Taking the work of Edward Schillebeeckx into uncharted territory, this is a valuable resource for students and researchers of systematic theology, political theology and ecotheology.
Elizabeth Pyne is Adjunct Instructor at Fordham University's London Centre, UK.
Introduction Chapter 1Theological Anthropology, Modernity, and the Problem of Nature Chapter 2Edward Schillebeeckx on the Cause of CreationChapter 3Species of Negativity: Human Integrity and the Mystery of Suffering in Schillebeeckx’s Theology of Creation Faith Chapter 4Critical Theory and Nature’s Nonidentity: Thinking Ecologically with Adorno Chapter 5A Political Ecology of Creation Faith: Toward the Liberation of Creaturely Difference Conclusion BibliographyIndex