Call to Radical Theology
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Publisher: State University of New York Press
ISBN: 9781438444529
Number of Pages: 211
Published: 02/01/2013
Width: 15.2 cm
Height: 22.9 cm
In The Call to Radical Theology, Thomas J. J. Altizer meditates on the nature of radical theology and calls readers to undertake the vocation of radical theology as a way of living a fully examined life. In fourteen essays, he explores how the death of God in modernity and the dissolution of divine authority have freed theology to become a mode of ultimate reflection and creative inquiry no longer bound by church sanction or doctrinal strictures.
Revealing a wealth of vital models for doing radical theological thinking, Altizer discusses the work of philosophers such as Hegel, Nietzsche, Heidegger, Marion, Derrida, and Levinas, among others. Resources are also found in the work of imaginative writers, especially Milton, Blake, and Joyce. In the spirit of Joyce's Here Comes Everybody, Altizer is convinced that theology is for everyone and that everyone has the authority to do theology authentically. An introduction by Lissa McCullough and foreword by David E. Klemm help orient the reader to Altizer's distinctive understanding of the role of theology after the death of God.
Revealing a wealth of vital models for doing radical theological thinking, Altizer discusses the work of philosophers such as Hegel, Nietzsche, Heidegger, Marion, Derrida, and Levinas, among others. Resources are also found in the work of imaginative writers, especially Milton, Blake, and Joyce. In the spirit of Joyce's Here Comes Everybody, Altizer is convinced that theology is for everyone and that everyone has the authority to do theology authentically. An introduction by Lissa McCullough and foreword by David E. Klemm help orient the reader to Altizer's distinctive understanding of the role of theology after the death of God.
Foreword by David E. Klemm
Editor’s Acknowledgments
Introduction by Lissa McCullough
1. Doing Radical Theology
2. Ancient and Modern Apocalypticism
3. Renewing the Kingdom of God
4. Hegel: The Phenomenology of Spirit as Ground of a Uniquely Modern Theology
5. Nietzsche: Nihilism and the Illusion of Ethics
6. Heidegger: Ereignis and the Nothing
7. Marion: Dionysian Theology as a Catholic Nihilism
8. Contemporary French Thinking and the Primordial
9. Modernity and the Origin of Angst
10. Postmodernity and Guilt
11. The Epic Voyage into Apocalypse
12. Adieu: The Call to Radical Theology
Appendix A: The Gospel of Christian Atheism Reexamined
Appendix B: Altizer on Altizer: A Self-Critique
Works Cited
Index
Editor’s Acknowledgments
Introduction by Lissa McCullough
1. Doing Radical Theology
2. Ancient and Modern Apocalypticism
3. Renewing the Kingdom of God
4. Hegel: The Phenomenology of Spirit as Ground of a Uniquely Modern Theology
5. Nietzsche: Nihilism and the Illusion of Ethics
6. Heidegger: Ereignis and the Nothing
7. Marion: Dionysian Theology as a Catholic Nihilism
8. Contemporary French Thinking and the Primordial
9. Modernity and the Origin of Angst
10. Postmodernity and Guilt
11. The Epic Voyage into Apocalypse
12. Adieu: The Call to Radical Theology
Appendix A: The Gospel of Christian Atheism Reexamined
Appendix B: Altizer on Altizer: A Self-Critique
Works Cited
Index