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Some feminist women search for the roots of feminism in the recent past; others write the past off. Too many assume that religious traditions have nothing to offer feminism, so even when religious belief has been central to the inspiration of some of the most powerful campaigners for the value and worth of women, the significance of that belief has been ignored. Mary Wollstonecraft argued for the 'rights' of women'; Josephine Butler fought against the devaluation of women expressed in the Contagious Diseases Acts; Dorothy L. Sayers had a powerful sense of the way women and men grace one…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Some feminist women search for the roots of feminism in the recent past; others write the past off. Too many assume that religious traditions have nothing to offer feminism, so even when religious belief has been central to the inspiration of some of the most powerful campaigners for the value and worth of women, the significance of that belief has been ignored. Mary Wollstonecraft argued for the 'rights' of women'; Josephine Butler fought against the devaluation of women expressed in the Contagious Diseases Acts; Dorothy L. Sayers had a powerful sense of the way women and men grace one another's lives in their work. They all drew on the Christian tradition of their own times, but this has rarely been given weight. These women have not been considered together, nor as theologians, as here in Ann Loades's new book. In their life time, each of them opened up some painful issues: abortion and its significance in our shared social lives, forms of coercion, especially the sexual abuse of children, and the importance of women's work. Their courage and generosity offer salutary challenges to our own times. Feminist Theology will be of interest to all those concerned with contemporary theological questions as well as to students of feminism and the analysis of gender, in sociology, politics and the humanities.
Autorenporträt
Ann Loades is Professor of Divinity at the University of Durham
Rezensionen
'Setting three distinguished women carefully in theirhistorical contexts, Ann Loades treats them as fellow human beingswho can increase our moral understanding. Her approach is humane,serious, judicious, realistic and, above all, fair-minded, with acongenial emphasis on "full human flourishing". She is warmly butnot fiercely on the side of women, and refreshingly able toappreciate the contribution of men. "Self-governance" is a keywordand demands not only listening to women, but honouring theirresponsible concern.' - Helen Oppenheimer, authorof The Hope of Happiness