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Black Theology and the Menace of Racial Apocalypse demonstrates why Black theology needs Bernard Lonergan to understand the evolution of prejudice and racism in contemporary self-styled "colour-blind" society.
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Black Theology and the Menace of Racial Apocalypse demonstrates why Black theology needs Bernard Lonergan to understand the evolution of prejudice and racism in contemporary self-styled "colour-blind" society.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: University of Toronto Press
- Seitenzahl: 256
- Erscheinungstermin: 15. Juni 2025
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 25mm
- ISBN-13: 9781487558017
- ISBN-10: 1487558015
- Artikelnr.: 71659804
- Verlag: University of Toronto Press
- Seitenzahl: 256
- Erscheinungstermin: 15. Juni 2025
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 25mm
- ISBN-13: 9781487558017
- ISBN-10: 1487558015
- Artikelnr.: 71659804
Cyril Orji is a professor of systematic theology and world Christianity at the University of Dayton.
Preface
Acknowledgment
Introduction
1. The Seven Horse Riders of Racial Apocalypse
A Statement of the Problem
Recovering the Heroic Virtues and the Poetic Imagination of James Baldwin
Naming the Seven Horse Riders of Racial Apocalypse
Conclusion
2. The Perplexing Matter of Black Theology
Context of Black Theology and the Category of Meaning
Why the American Situation Finds the Term "Black" Appropriate
Mediating Writers and Theologians
(a) James Baldwin
(b) James H. Cone
(c) J. Deotis Roberts
(d) Katie Geneva Cannon
Shift Towards a Second Wave
Conclusion
3. The Nature of Prejudice: A Psychological and Theological Understanding
Why Black Theology Has Not Paid Attention to the Data of Consciousness
Prejudice: A Provisional Judgment?
What an Application of Lonergan’s Notion of Common Sense to Critical Race
Theory Yields for Race Discourse
The Four Kinds of Common Sense Bias
(a) Dramatic Bias
(b) Individual Bias
(c) Group Bias
(d) General Bias of Common Sense
The Structures of Sin
How Black Theology Might Appropriate and Use Lonergan’s Notion of Bias
Conclusion
4. The Karen Phenomenon and the Conceptualist Problem of White Privilege
Discourse
A Truncated Discourse
Engaging the Normative View of White Privilege
The COVID-19 World and the Quest for an Explanatory Definition
Karen and Systemic Racism
White Privilege: A Theological Problem for Black Theology
Conclusion
5. Implicit Bias and the Zero-Sum Game Problem
The Perduring Myth That Blacks Pose a Racial Threat
The Recurring Problem of Dramatic Bias
It Is Not Microaggression but Dramatic Bias
Implicit Bias and the Cycles of Decline: Structural Injustice
Conclusion
6. Overcoming Racism and Conversion
Conversion: A Resistance against Resistance
The Five Dimensional Conversion Process (5D-C Process)
(a) Religious Conversion
(b) Moral Conversion
(c) Intellectual Conversion
(d) Affective Conversion
(e) Psychic Conversion
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgment
Introduction
1. The Seven Horse Riders of Racial Apocalypse
A Statement of the Problem
Recovering the Heroic Virtues and the Poetic Imagination of James Baldwin
Naming the Seven Horse Riders of Racial Apocalypse
Conclusion
2. The Perplexing Matter of Black Theology
Context of Black Theology and the Category of Meaning
Why the American Situation Finds the Term "Black" Appropriate
Mediating Writers and Theologians
(a) James Baldwin
(b) James H. Cone
(c) J. Deotis Roberts
(d) Katie Geneva Cannon
Shift Towards a Second Wave
Conclusion
3. The Nature of Prejudice: A Psychological and Theological Understanding
Why Black Theology Has Not Paid Attention to the Data of Consciousness
Prejudice: A Provisional Judgment?
What an Application of Lonergan’s Notion of Common Sense to Critical Race
Theory Yields for Race Discourse
The Four Kinds of Common Sense Bias
(a) Dramatic Bias
(b) Individual Bias
(c) Group Bias
(d) General Bias of Common Sense
The Structures of Sin
How Black Theology Might Appropriate and Use Lonergan’s Notion of Bias
Conclusion
4. The Karen Phenomenon and the Conceptualist Problem of White Privilege
Discourse
A Truncated Discourse
Engaging the Normative View of White Privilege
The COVID-19 World and the Quest for an Explanatory Definition
Karen and Systemic Racism
White Privilege: A Theological Problem for Black Theology
Conclusion
5. Implicit Bias and the Zero-Sum Game Problem
The Perduring Myth That Blacks Pose a Racial Threat
The Recurring Problem of Dramatic Bias
It Is Not Microaggression but Dramatic Bias
Implicit Bias and the Cycles of Decline: Structural Injustice
Conclusion
6. Overcoming Racism and Conversion
Conversion: A Resistance against Resistance
The Five Dimensional Conversion Process (5D-C Process)
(a) Religious Conversion
(b) Moral Conversion
(c) Intellectual Conversion
(d) Affective Conversion
(e) Psychic Conversion
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Preface
Acknowledgment
Introduction
1. The Seven Horse Riders of Racial Apocalypse
A Statement of the Problem
Recovering the Heroic Virtues and the Poetic Imagination of James Baldwin
Naming the Seven Horse Riders of Racial Apocalypse
Conclusion
2. The Perplexing Matter of Black Theology
Context of Black Theology and the Category of Meaning
Why the American Situation Finds the Term "Black" Appropriate
Mediating Writers and Theologians
(a) James Baldwin
(b) James H. Cone
(c) J. Deotis Roberts
(d) Katie Geneva Cannon
Shift Towards a Second Wave
Conclusion
3. The Nature of Prejudice: A Psychological and Theological Understanding
Why Black Theology Has Not Paid Attention to the Data of Consciousness
Prejudice: A Provisional Judgment?
What an Application of Lonergan’s Notion of Common Sense to Critical Race
Theory Yields for Race Discourse
The Four Kinds of Common Sense Bias
(a) Dramatic Bias
(b) Individual Bias
(c) Group Bias
(d) General Bias of Common Sense
The Structures of Sin
How Black Theology Might Appropriate and Use Lonergan’s Notion of Bias
Conclusion
4. The Karen Phenomenon and the Conceptualist Problem of White Privilege
Discourse
A Truncated Discourse
Engaging the Normative View of White Privilege
The COVID-19 World and the Quest for an Explanatory Definition
Karen and Systemic Racism
White Privilege: A Theological Problem for Black Theology
Conclusion
5. Implicit Bias and the Zero-Sum Game Problem
The Perduring Myth That Blacks Pose a Racial Threat
The Recurring Problem of Dramatic Bias
It Is Not Microaggression but Dramatic Bias
Implicit Bias and the Cycles of Decline: Structural Injustice
Conclusion
6. Overcoming Racism and Conversion
Conversion: A Resistance against Resistance
The Five Dimensional Conversion Process (5D-C Process)
(a) Religious Conversion
(b) Moral Conversion
(c) Intellectual Conversion
(d) Affective Conversion
(e) Psychic Conversion
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgment
Introduction
1. The Seven Horse Riders of Racial Apocalypse
A Statement of the Problem
Recovering the Heroic Virtues and the Poetic Imagination of James Baldwin
Naming the Seven Horse Riders of Racial Apocalypse
Conclusion
2. The Perplexing Matter of Black Theology
Context of Black Theology and the Category of Meaning
Why the American Situation Finds the Term "Black" Appropriate
Mediating Writers and Theologians
(a) James Baldwin
(b) James H. Cone
(c) J. Deotis Roberts
(d) Katie Geneva Cannon
Shift Towards a Second Wave
Conclusion
3. The Nature of Prejudice: A Psychological and Theological Understanding
Why Black Theology Has Not Paid Attention to the Data of Consciousness
Prejudice: A Provisional Judgment?
What an Application of Lonergan’s Notion of Common Sense to Critical Race
Theory Yields for Race Discourse
The Four Kinds of Common Sense Bias
(a) Dramatic Bias
(b) Individual Bias
(c) Group Bias
(d) General Bias of Common Sense
The Structures of Sin
How Black Theology Might Appropriate and Use Lonergan’s Notion of Bias
Conclusion
4. The Karen Phenomenon and the Conceptualist Problem of White Privilege
Discourse
A Truncated Discourse
Engaging the Normative View of White Privilege
The COVID-19 World and the Quest for an Explanatory Definition
Karen and Systemic Racism
White Privilege: A Theological Problem for Black Theology
Conclusion
5. Implicit Bias and the Zero-Sum Game Problem
The Perduring Myth That Blacks Pose a Racial Threat
The Recurring Problem of Dramatic Bias
It Is Not Microaggression but Dramatic Bias
Implicit Bias and the Cycles of Decline: Structural Injustice
Conclusion
6. Overcoming Racism and Conversion
Conversion: A Resistance against Resistance
The Five Dimensional Conversion Process (5D-C Process)
(a) Religious Conversion
(b) Moral Conversion
(c) Intellectual Conversion
(d) Affective Conversion
(e) Psychic Conversion
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index