Skip to product information
1 of 1

FORTRESS PRESS

Interrupting a Gendered, Violent Church

Interrupting a Gendered, Violent Church

ISBN: 9781506431598
Stock available

Regular price $40.79 AUD
Regular price $50.99 AUD Sale price $40.79 AUD
Sale Sold out
Taxes included. Shipping calculated at checkout.

This project brings readers into conversation at the intersections of gender studies and Christian theology--particularly diverse feminist and queer theologies. Interrupting a Gendered, Violent Church develops over three parts to an extended essay that points to the real ways churches foster violence around gender. This volume discusses this violent reality while also exploring church as a nexus for resistance to gender-based violence and sketches the contours of a Christian theology mapped apart from patriarchal heteronormativity's hold on late modern Christian life. The goal of the Dispatches series is to offer a genuinely creative and disruptive theological-ethical ressourcement for church in the present moment. Volumes illuminate and explore, creatively and concisely, the implications and relevance of theology for the global crises of late modernity. Our authors have been invited to introduce succinct and provocative arguments intended to provoke dialogue and exchange of ideas, while setting in relief the implications of theology for political and moral life.

By Anna Mercedes, Edited by Ashley John Moyse, Scott A. Kirkland

Imprint: FORTRESS PRESS

Release Date:

Format: PAPERBACK

Pages: 224

View full details

Author Bio

Anna Mercedes is associate professor of theology in the College of Saint Benedict of Saint John's University. Her teaching and research take up feminist theology and gender as well as various loci in systematic theology. She is author of Power For: Feminism and Christ's Self-Giving (T&T Clark, 2011). Ashley Moyse is the McDonald Postdoctoral Fellow in Christian Ethics and Public Life at Christ Church, University of Oxford. He is also a research associate at Vancouver School of Theology at the University of British Columbia. He is the author of Reading Karl Barth, Interrupting Moral Technique, and Transforming Biomedical Ethics and has coedited several volumes, including Correlating Sobornost: Conversations between Karl Barth and the Russian Orthodox Tradition (Fortress, 2016), Kenotic Ecclesiology: Select Writings of Donald M. MacKinnon (Fortress, 2016), and Treating the Body in Medicine and Religion: Jewish, Christian, and Islamic Perspectives. Scott A. Kirkland is an honorary postdoctoral research associate at Trinity College, University of Divinity, Melbourne.