Women Writing Theology: Transforming a Tradition of Exclusion

Women Writing Theology: Transforming a Tradition of Exclusion book cover

Women Writing Theology: Transforming a Tradition of Exclusion

Author(s): Emily A. Holmes (editor)|Wendy Farley (editor) (Author)

  • Publisher: Baylor University Press
  • Publication Date: 30 Nov. 2011
  • Language: English
  • Print length: 327 pages
  • ISBN-10: 1602583765
  • ISBN-13: 9781602583764

Book Description

Women’s theology has traditionally been pushed to the margins; it is “”spirituality”” or “”mysticism”” rather than theology proper. Theology from women has been transmitted orally, recorded by men as sayings or in hagiographies, or passed on as “”stealth theology”” in poems, hymns, or practices. In the past forty years, women have claimed theology for themselves and others as womanists, feminists, mujeristas, Asian, third-world, disabled, and queer women. Yet in most academic and ecclesial theology, the contributions of women skirt the borders of the written tradition. This unique volume asks about the conditions of women writing theology. How have women historically justified their writing practices? What internal and external constraints shape their capacity to write? What counts as theology, and who qualifies as a theologian? And what does it mean for women to enter a tradition that has been based, in part, on their exclusion? These essays explore such questions through historical investigations, theoretical analyses, and contemporary constructions.

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From the Back Cover

Focusing on the practice of writing, these women essayists explore: What counts as theology?

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