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God and Globalization: Religion and the Powers of the Common Life
 
 
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God and Globalization: Religion and the Powers of the Common Life [Hardcover]

Max L. Stackhouse (Author), Peter Paris (Author)


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Book Description

156338311X 978-1563383113 June 2000
In the late 20th century, the world has grown increasingly smaller because of advances in technology and the erosion of the nation-state as a political paradigm. The process of globalization—with its promises of a common culture, a common currency, and a common government—offers a new political model for the world that fosters unity and community. At the same time, however, this process threatens to destroy the values, norms, and ideals that particular cultures have wrought and established and to thereby diminish the power of each culture’s unique identity. As globalization occurs, society must decide which values will be normative and what roles that social institutions like religion and education will play in selecting and fostering these values.

The contributors to this volume examine both the promise and the threat of globalization using the tools of theological ethics to understand and evaluate the "social contexts of life at the deepest moral and spiritual levels." This inaugural volume of a projected four volume series, Theology for the 21st Century: God and Globalization, examines five spheres of life—economics (Mammon), political science (Mars), psychology and sexuality (Eros), the mass media and the arts (Muses), and religion—that foster normative values for society. As the writers argue, their efforts attempt to determine whether "God is behind globalization in any substantive way."



Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

In an age in which globalization is too often just a buzzword for a phenomenon narrowly described in terms of economics and information technology, the God and Globalization trilogy presents serious reflection on the intersection of these with globalization's cultural, religious and moral dimensions. In this second volume, edited by Christian ethicist Stackhouse with practical theologian Browning, contributors consider what the series calls the modern "Authorities" (education, law, medicine and technology) and the implications of what they see as a gradual, historical attrition of these authorities' theological foundations. What does it mean that these authoritative institutions are no longer tethered to the particular confessions, covenants and communities from which they historically arose? When technology is its own authority, who determines its shape, limits and distribution? In calling for a "public theological ethic," the editors seek public space for the deep value questions of ethics and theology that have largely failed to appear in conversations about globalization's most ambivalent dimensions. This is a scholarly book that will reward the serious reader willing to work through the matrix of powers, principalities, regencies and authorities it describes. While the introduction is a bit dense and may give readers the feeling that they have entered a conversation midstream, the six essays that follow (written by theologically minded experts in law, technology, ecology, education, health care and ethics) are provocative, delivering the volume's thesis elegantly and concretely. (Jan.)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Review

"...an important volume..." -- P. L. Redditt, Choice, March 2001

"This is an important volume" -- P. L. Redditt, Georgetown College, reviewing for Choice, March 2001

"This unusually clear and unified collection provides and excellent resource, for discerning the risk and promise of globalization." -- John K. Downey, Gonzaga University, January 2002

... an important volume -- P. L. Redditt, Georgetown College, reviewing for Choice, March 2001

This fine volume will provoke much needed debate about the meaning, the perils, and the possibilities of globalization... -- Jean Bethke Elshtain, Laura Spellman Rockefeller Professor of Social and Political Ethics, University of Chicago, March 2000

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Trinity Press International (June 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 156338311X
  • ISBN-13: 978-1563383113
  • Product Dimensions: 8.6 x 5.9 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,075,722 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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