Robert Macswain, Taylor Worley
Theology, Aesthetics, and Culture: Responses to the Work of David Brown
Robert Macswain, Taylor Worley
Theology, Aesthetics, and Culture: Responses to the Work of David Brown
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British theologian David Brown has published a series of five books on theology and the arts. This volume is a collection of responses to this body of work, and includes essays by prominent philosophers, theologians, biblical, and literary scholars. Together they provide a fresh treatment of theology, aesthetics, and culture.
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British theologian David Brown has published a series of five books on theology and the arts. This volume is a collection of responses to this body of work, and includes essays by prominent philosophers, theologians, biblical, and literary scholars. Together they provide a fresh treatment of theology, aesthetics, and culture.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press, USA
- Seitenzahl: 320
- Erscheinungstermin: 17. November 2012
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 236mm x 163mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 680g
- ISBN-13: 9780199646821
- ISBN-10: 0199646821
- Artikelnr.: 35275554
- Verlag: Oxford University Press, USA
- Seitenzahl: 320
- Erscheinungstermin: 17. November 2012
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 236mm x 163mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 680g
- ISBN-13: 9780199646821
- ISBN-10: 0199646821
- Artikelnr.: 35275554
* Introduction: Theology, Aesthetics, and Culture
* I: Tradition and Imagination: Revelation and Change
* 1: William J. Abraham: Scripture, Tradition, and Revelation: An
Appreciative Critique of David Brown
* 2: Richard Viladesau: Revelation, Christ, and Fundamental Theology:
David Brown and Karl Rahner in Dialogue
* 3: Margaret R. Miles: The Resurrection of Body: Reimagining Human
Personhood in Christian Tradition
* II: Discipleship and Imagination: Christian Tradition and Truth
* 4: Richard Bauckham: Saints Before and After Death
* 5: Tina Beattie: From Ethics to Eschatology: The Continuing Validity
of the New Eve for Christian Doctrine and Discipleship
* 6: Douglas Hedley: Revelation Imagined: Fiction, Truth, and
Transformation
* III: God and Enchantment of Place: Reclaiming Human Experience
* 7: Gordon Graham: Enchantment and Transcendence: David Brown on Art
and Architecture
* 8: Charles Taliaferro: Transcending Place and Time: A Response to
David Brown on Enchantment, Epistemology, and Experience
* 9: Mark Wynn: Re-enchanting the World: The Possibility of
Materially-Mediated Religious Experience
* IV: God and Grace of Body: Sacrament in Ordinary
* 10: Kimerer L. LaMothe: I am the Dance : Towards an Earthed
Christianity
* 11: Jeremy S. Begbie: Openness and Specificity: A Conversation with
David Brown on Theology and Classical Music
* 12: Gavin Hopps: Infinite Hospitality and the Redemption of Kitsch
* 13: Judith S. Casselberry: Were We Ever Secular?: Interrogating David
Brown on Gospel, Blues, and Pop Music
* 14: Clive Marsh: What if David Brown Had Owned a Television?
* 15: Graham Ward: After Ascension: The Body of Christ, Kenosis, and
Divine Impassiblity
* V: God and Mystery in Words: Experience Through Metaphor and Drama
* 16: David Fuller: A sensibility for the infinite : Metaphor, Symbol,
Form, and the Sublime
* 17: Trevor Hart: Lectio Divina?
* 18: Ben Quash: The Density of Divine Address: Liturgy, Drama, and
Human Transformation
* 19: Ann Loades and Bridget Nichols: The Liturgical Body and the Gift
of Presence
* Response: Experience, Symbol, and Revelation: Continuing the
Conversation
* Postscript: On Theology's Ekphrastic Mode
* I: Tradition and Imagination: Revelation and Change
* 1: William J. Abraham: Scripture, Tradition, and Revelation: An
Appreciative Critique of David Brown
* 2: Richard Viladesau: Revelation, Christ, and Fundamental Theology:
David Brown and Karl Rahner in Dialogue
* 3: Margaret R. Miles: The Resurrection of Body: Reimagining Human
Personhood in Christian Tradition
* II: Discipleship and Imagination: Christian Tradition and Truth
* 4: Richard Bauckham: Saints Before and After Death
* 5: Tina Beattie: From Ethics to Eschatology: The Continuing Validity
of the New Eve for Christian Doctrine and Discipleship
* 6: Douglas Hedley: Revelation Imagined: Fiction, Truth, and
Transformation
* III: God and Enchantment of Place: Reclaiming Human Experience
* 7: Gordon Graham: Enchantment and Transcendence: David Brown on Art
and Architecture
* 8: Charles Taliaferro: Transcending Place and Time: A Response to
David Brown on Enchantment, Epistemology, and Experience
* 9: Mark Wynn: Re-enchanting the World: The Possibility of
Materially-Mediated Religious Experience
* IV: God and Grace of Body: Sacrament in Ordinary
* 10: Kimerer L. LaMothe: I am the Dance : Towards an Earthed
Christianity
* 11: Jeremy S. Begbie: Openness and Specificity: A Conversation with
David Brown on Theology and Classical Music
* 12: Gavin Hopps: Infinite Hospitality and the Redemption of Kitsch
* 13: Judith S. Casselberry: Were We Ever Secular?: Interrogating David
Brown on Gospel, Blues, and Pop Music
* 14: Clive Marsh: What if David Brown Had Owned a Television?
* 15: Graham Ward: After Ascension: The Body of Christ, Kenosis, and
Divine Impassiblity
* V: God and Mystery in Words: Experience Through Metaphor and Drama
* 16: David Fuller: A sensibility for the infinite : Metaphor, Symbol,
Form, and the Sublime
* 17: Trevor Hart: Lectio Divina?
* 18: Ben Quash: The Density of Divine Address: Liturgy, Drama, and
Human Transformation
* 19: Ann Loades and Bridget Nichols: The Liturgical Body and the Gift
of Presence
* Response: Experience, Symbol, and Revelation: Continuing the
Conversation
* Postscript: On Theology's Ekphrastic Mode
* Introduction: Theology, Aesthetics, and Culture
* I: Tradition and Imagination: Revelation and Change
* 1: William J. Abraham: Scripture, Tradition, and Revelation: An
Appreciative Critique of David Brown
* 2: Richard Viladesau: Revelation, Christ, and Fundamental Theology:
David Brown and Karl Rahner in Dialogue
* 3: Margaret R. Miles: The Resurrection of Body: Reimagining Human
Personhood in Christian Tradition
* II: Discipleship and Imagination: Christian Tradition and Truth
* 4: Richard Bauckham: Saints Before and After Death
* 5: Tina Beattie: From Ethics to Eschatology: The Continuing Validity
of the New Eve for Christian Doctrine and Discipleship
* 6: Douglas Hedley: Revelation Imagined: Fiction, Truth, and
Transformation
* III: God and Enchantment of Place: Reclaiming Human Experience
* 7: Gordon Graham: Enchantment and Transcendence: David Brown on Art
and Architecture
* 8: Charles Taliaferro: Transcending Place and Time: A Response to
David Brown on Enchantment, Epistemology, and Experience
* 9: Mark Wynn: Re-enchanting the World: The Possibility of
Materially-Mediated Religious Experience
* IV: God and Grace of Body: Sacrament in Ordinary
* 10: Kimerer L. LaMothe: I am the Dance : Towards an Earthed
Christianity
* 11: Jeremy S. Begbie: Openness and Specificity: A Conversation with
David Brown on Theology and Classical Music
* 12: Gavin Hopps: Infinite Hospitality and the Redemption of Kitsch
* 13: Judith S. Casselberry: Were We Ever Secular?: Interrogating David
Brown on Gospel, Blues, and Pop Music
* 14: Clive Marsh: What if David Brown Had Owned a Television?
* 15: Graham Ward: After Ascension: The Body of Christ, Kenosis, and
Divine Impassiblity
* V: God and Mystery in Words: Experience Through Metaphor and Drama
* 16: David Fuller: A sensibility for the infinite : Metaphor, Symbol,
Form, and the Sublime
* 17: Trevor Hart: Lectio Divina?
* 18: Ben Quash: The Density of Divine Address: Liturgy, Drama, and
Human Transformation
* 19: Ann Loades and Bridget Nichols: The Liturgical Body and the Gift
of Presence
* Response: Experience, Symbol, and Revelation: Continuing the
Conversation
* Postscript: On Theology's Ekphrastic Mode
* I: Tradition and Imagination: Revelation and Change
* 1: William J. Abraham: Scripture, Tradition, and Revelation: An
Appreciative Critique of David Brown
* 2: Richard Viladesau: Revelation, Christ, and Fundamental Theology:
David Brown and Karl Rahner in Dialogue
* 3: Margaret R. Miles: The Resurrection of Body: Reimagining Human
Personhood in Christian Tradition
* II: Discipleship and Imagination: Christian Tradition and Truth
* 4: Richard Bauckham: Saints Before and After Death
* 5: Tina Beattie: From Ethics to Eschatology: The Continuing Validity
of the New Eve for Christian Doctrine and Discipleship
* 6: Douglas Hedley: Revelation Imagined: Fiction, Truth, and
Transformation
* III: God and Enchantment of Place: Reclaiming Human Experience
* 7: Gordon Graham: Enchantment and Transcendence: David Brown on Art
and Architecture
* 8: Charles Taliaferro: Transcending Place and Time: A Response to
David Brown on Enchantment, Epistemology, and Experience
* 9: Mark Wynn: Re-enchanting the World: The Possibility of
Materially-Mediated Religious Experience
* IV: God and Grace of Body: Sacrament in Ordinary
* 10: Kimerer L. LaMothe: I am the Dance : Towards an Earthed
Christianity
* 11: Jeremy S. Begbie: Openness and Specificity: A Conversation with
David Brown on Theology and Classical Music
* 12: Gavin Hopps: Infinite Hospitality and the Redemption of Kitsch
* 13: Judith S. Casselberry: Were We Ever Secular?: Interrogating David
Brown on Gospel, Blues, and Pop Music
* 14: Clive Marsh: What if David Brown Had Owned a Television?
* 15: Graham Ward: After Ascension: The Body of Christ, Kenosis, and
Divine Impassiblity
* V: God and Mystery in Words: Experience Through Metaphor and Drama
* 16: David Fuller: A sensibility for the infinite : Metaphor, Symbol,
Form, and the Sublime
* 17: Trevor Hart: Lectio Divina?
* 18: Ben Quash: The Density of Divine Address: Liturgy, Drama, and
Human Transformation
* 19: Ann Loades and Bridget Nichols: The Liturgical Body and the Gift
of Presence
* Response: Experience, Symbol, and Revelation: Continuing the
Conversation
* Postscript: On Theology's Ekphrastic Mode