ABSTRACT

Simultaneously arising out of such diverse contexts as the black community in the United States, grassroots religious communities in Latin America, and feminist circles in North Atlantic countries, theologies of liberation have emerged as a resource and inspiration for people seeking social and political freedom. Over the last three decades, liberation theology has irrevocably altered religious thinking and practice throughout the Americas. Liberation Theologies, Postmodernity and the Americas provides a meaningful and spirited debate on vital interpretive issues in religion, philosophy, and ethics. The renowned group of scholars explore liberation theologies' uses of discourses of emancipation, revolution and utopia in contrast with postmodernism's suspicion of grand narratives, while assessing what the postmodernism/liberation debate means for strategies of social and political transformation. Guided by the experiences of those at the margins of social power, liberation theologies demystify the eurocentric myths of secularization and modernity, and calls for a re-appraisal of religion in contemporary societies. Contributors: Edmund Arens, David Batstone, Maria Clara Bingemer, Enrique Dussel, Gustavo Gutierrez, Jurgen Habermas, Franz Hinkelammert, Dwight Hopkins, Lois Ann Lorentzen, Eduardo Mendieta, Amos Nascimento, Elsa Tamez, Mark McLain Taylor, and Sharon Welch, Robert Allen Warrior

part I|100 pages

Dangerous Hope & Liberating Memory

chapter 1|28 pages

Liberation Theology in the Economic and Social Context of Latin America

Economy and Theology, or the Irrationality of the Rationalized

chapter 2|16 pages

When the Horizons Close Upon Themselves

A Reflection on the Utopian Reason of Qohélet

chapter 5|28 pages

Black Masks on White Faces

Liberation Theology and the Quest for Syncretism in the Brazilian Context 1

part II|80 pages

Crossing Borders

chapter 6|3 pages

Section Introduction: Dancing with Chaos

Reflections on Power, Contingency, and Social Change

chapter 7|20 pages

Writing for Liberation

Prison Testimonials from El Salvador

chapter 9|19 pages

Vodou Resistance/Vodou Hope

Forging a Postmodernism That Liberates

chapter 10|15 pages

William Apess

A Pequot and a Methodist under the Sign of Modernity

part III|102 pages

Postmodern Praxes and Liberation Theories

chapter 11|17 pages

Postmodernity, Black Theology of Liberation and the U.S.A.

Michel Foucault and James H, Cone

chapter 12|21 pages

Interruptions

Critical Theory and Political Theology Between Modernity and Postmodernity

chapter 13|10 pages

Israel and Athens, or to Whom Does Anamnestic Reason Belong?

On Unity in Multicultural Diversity

chapter 14|20 pages

From Christendom to Polyccntric Oikonumé

Modernity, Postmodernity, and Liberation Theology 1

chapter 15|32 pages

The Architectonic of the Ethics of Liberation

On Material Ethics and Formal Moralities 1