In Women, Sainthood, and Power, Oliva M. Espin examines the life stories of several female saints within their respective cultural and historical contexts from the perspective of feminist psychology and gender politics in the Catholic church.
In Women, Sainthood, and Power, Oliva M. Espin examines the life stories of several female saints within their respective cultural and historical contexts from the perspective of feminist psychology and gender politics in the Catholic church.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Oliva M. Espín is professor emerita in the Department of Women's Studies at San Diego State University and professor emerita of psychology at the California School of Professional Psychology of Alliant International University.
Inhaltsangabe
AcknowledgmentsPreface: A Tale about Hope, Courage, and Saints Introduction: Fire and Gas: Women Saints over Five Centuries Chapter 1: La Fabbrica dei Santi- How Politics and Culture Determine Who Is a Saint Chapter 2: Political Saints and Saintly Politics: Joan of Arc and Catherine of Siena Chapter 3: "Holy Anorexics" God, Agency, Women's Bodies and Self-Starvation in Early Colonial Spanish-America: Rose of Lima and Mariana of Quito Chapter 4: Las Santas Criollas: Rosa de Lima, Mariana de Quito, and National Identity in Colonial Spanish-America Chapter 5: Teresa of Avila: The Love of God as Source of Authority Chapter 6: Edith Stein: Paradoxes of a Jewish Saint Chapter 7: Mystics of Political Resistance: Teresa of Avila's and Edith Stein's Visions of Womanhood Chapter 8: Pain, Loss, and Psychological Distress in Thérèse of Lisieux, The 'Little Flower' who wanted to be a Priest Chapter 9: Doctors but not Priests- Women Doctors in the Roman Catholic Church: Teresa, Catherine, Thérèse and Hildegard Chapter 10: North American Saints: Cabrini, Seton, Drexel, Tekakwitha...But No Black American Saints Yet Conclusion: Final Thoughts References About the Author
AcknowledgmentsPreface: A Tale about Hope, Courage, and Saints Introduction: Fire and Gas: Women Saints over Five Centuries Chapter 1: La Fabbrica dei Santi- How Politics and Culture Determine Who Is a Saint Chapter 2: Political Saints and Saintly Politics: Joan of Arc and Catherine of Siena Chapter 3: "Holy Anorexics" God, Agency, Women's Bodies and Self-Starvation in Early Colonial Spanish-America: Rose of Lima and Mariana of Quito Chapter 4: Las Santas Criollas: Rosa de Lima, Mariana de Quito, and National Identity in Colonial Spanish-America Chapter 5: Teresa of Avila: The Love of God as Source of Authority Chapter 6: Edith Stein: Paradoxes of a Jewish Saint Chapter 7: Mystics of Political Resistance: Teresa of Avila's and Edith Stein's Visions of Womanhood Chapter 8: Pain, Loss, and Psychological Distress in Thérèse of Lisieux, The 'Little Flower' who wanted to be a Priest Chapter 9: Doctors but not Priests- Women Doctors in the Roman Catholic Church: Teresa, Catherine, Thérèse and Hildegard Chapter 10: North American Saints: Cabrini, Seton, Drexel, Tekakwitha...But No Black American Saints Yet Conclusion: Final Thoughts References About the Author
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