ABSTRACT

It is hard to over-estimate the challenge that feminism poses to Roman Catholicism. Pope John Paul II's call for a 'new feminism' has led to the development of a Catholic theological response to the so-called 'old feminism'. The New Catholic Feminism sets up a dramatic encounter between the orthodox Catholic establishment and contemporary critical theory, including feminist theology and philosophy, queer theory, and French psycholinguistics, in order to explore fundamental questions about human identity, personhood and gender. From the naked bodies of Eden to the 'gay nuptials' of liturgy, it argues that the strange and volatile world of Catholic sexual symbolism cannot be 'tamed' to meet the ideological agendas of either feminist theology or conservative Catholicism. Only through a radical re-evaluation of the sacramental significance of the sexed human body might the Catholic Church provide a redemptive response to the sexual politics of contemporary society.

chapter |15 pages

Introduction

part |71 pages

The middle

part |95 pages

The end

chapter |20 pages

Cherchez la femme

gender, Church and priesthood

chapter |21 pages

Sex, death and melodrama

part |127 pages

The beginning

chapter |21 pages

Being beyond death

chapter |17 pages

Maternal beginnings

chapter |21 pages

Redeeming fatherhood

chapter |23 pages

Redeeming motherhood

chapter |21 pages

Redeeming language

chapter |22 pages

Redeeming sacramentality