Did Martin Luther King?s spiritual understanding of political struggle truly help the Civil Rights movement? Can breast cancer victims incorporate both spiritual wisdom and political action in their fight for life? Tackling such questions that shake the core of our political and spiritual foundations, Roger S. Gottlieb presents a brave new account of how religious ethics and progressive movements share a common vision of a transformed world. In doing so, he offers a bold and eloquent affirmation: that authentic religion requires an activist, transforming presence in the political world, and that the moral and psychological insights of religion are indispensable resources in political struggles for democracy, human rights and ecological sanity. With original and compelling interpretations of Martin Luther King and the civil rights struggle, feminism, disability rights, the global environmental movement, and the fight for breast cancer, Joining Hands will alter the way spiritual seekers, political activists, and society as a whole think about the political role of religion and the spiritual component of politics.
"Gottlieb writes well and with passion." -- Choice
"Makes refreshing contributions to the fields of social activism, and political science and will probably spark interesting discussion among readers." -- MultiCultural Review
"[an] absorbing look at the merger of religion and politics." -- Booklist--This text refers to the
Paperback
edition.
Roger S. Gottlieb is professor of philosophy at Worcester Polytechnic Institute. He is the author or editor of sixteen books and more than 100 articles on environmentalism, religious life, contemporary spirituality, political philosophy, ethics, the Holocaust, femin-ism, and disability. He is internationally known for his work as a leading analyst and ex-ponent of religious environmentalism, for his passionate and moving account of spiri-tuality in an age of environmental crisis, and for his innovative and humane description of the role of religion in a democratic society. He is editor of six academic book series, on the editorial boards of several journals, and contributing editor to Tikkun Magazine. Gottlieb's writings have appeared in top academic journals such as the Journal of Philosophy, Journal of the American Academy of Religion, Conservation Biology, and Ethics; in popular publications such as E Magazine online, The Boston Globe, and Orion Afield; and in anthologies celebrating the best of Jewish writing, environmental ethics, religious life, spirituality, the Holocaust, and disability. Widely respected for his unique range of interests, combination of personal and political passion, clarity of writing, and originality, he is probably the only American intellectual to be reviewed or interviewed in publications as disparate as San Francisco Chronicle, Environmental Ethics, the Boston Globe, Christianity Today, Philosophical Review, Journal of Harvard Divinity School, New Age Journal, Socialism and Democracy, Discover, Chronicle of Higher Education, Sierra Club Magazine, Shambhala Sun, and The American Prospect. For the last fifteen years Gottlieb has concentrated on the religious, spiritual, and eth-ical dimensions of the environmental crisis and on the place of religion in a democratic society. His anthology This Sacred Earth: Religion, Nature, Environment is known inter-nationally as the first comprehensive collection on the topic. His 1999 book, A Spirituali-ty of Resistance: Finding a Peaceful Heart and Protecting the Earth was called by Prot-estant theologian John Cobb "a true spiritual guide for our day," and excerpted in Tikkun and Orion Afield. His 2002 book Joining Hands: Politics and Religion Together for Social Change received advance praise from Harvey Cox and Bill McKibben. Gottlieb's recent work on religious environmentalism, A Greener Faith: Religious En-vironmentalism and our Planet's Future and The Oxford Handbook on Religion and Ecology establishes him as the leading commentator and exponent of this unprece-dented political, environmental, and religious movement. Bob Edgar, head of the Na-tional Council of Churches, said A Greener Faith provided "a bright picture of the faith community's capacity for caring for God's creation" and that following Gottlieb's lead would help us "go a long way toward being more effective stewards of our fragile pla-net." Carl Pope, Executive Director of the Sierra Club, called it a "seminal book examin-ing the emerging debate on environmental ethics among the world's great faith tradi-tions." Thomas Berry, one of the world's leading ecotheologians said it offers "superb insight" and is a "most needed guide." Gottlieb newest work is Engaging Voices: Tales of Morality and Meaning in an Age of Global Warming a collection of related but distinct short stories in which Gottlieb ex-plores moral, political, intellectual, and spiritual dilemmas provoked by the environmen-tal crisis; and asks how, in the face of powerful emotions and deeply contested views, we can live and talk to each other. [Read the Introduction to Engaging Voices.] As a speaker Gottlieb combines intense analytic intelligence, a personal and humo-rously engaging style, and an inspiring message of personal responsibility, social change, and spiritual vision. Audiences from universities, churches, synagogues, and community and environmental organizations have found him a riveting presenter whose message resonates long after his formal presentation is done and can lead people to act as well as think and feel. He lives in Boston with his wife, noted psychotherapist and author Miriam Greenspan, and shares in the care of his daughters, Anna and Esther. The spiritual and political di-mensions of his relation to Esther, who has multiple disabilities, forms part of Chapter 8 of Joining Hands.
This review is from: Joining Hands: Politics And Religion Together For Social Change (Hardcover)
Joining Hands is an outstanding critical analysis of the issues of politics, religion, and their interaction together with regards to ethical considerations and progressive political movements.
The book's author, Roger S. Gottlieb, is a professor of philosophy at the Worcester Polytechnic Institute in Worcester, Massachusetts. He is also the author of "Marxism: 1844-1990: Origins, Betrayal, Rebirth", "A Spirituality of Resistance: Finding a Peaceful Heart and Protecting the Earth", and "This Sacred Earth: Religion, Nature, Environment".
In Hands, Gottlieb explores the nature of politics and religion as they relate to ethics and the socially active person. In particular, Gottlieb argues (convincingly) that religious institutions and spiritual traditions have much to learn from secular politics (an argument fairly well understood by most) and also that secular political movements have a lot to learn from religion.
To illustrate how religion can "teach" politics, Gottlieb discusses a number of religious traditions including Judaism, Christianity, and Buddhism and shows how the strength of spiritual belief can an important asset to socially progressive political movements. I believe that this argument is an important and powerful one. Nearly every intellectual with whom I have discussed ethics knows the arguments about how religion can learn from secular politics (and indeed this point is well made in Hands). However, most have never considered Gottlieb's second point that religion can "teach" secular politics, and the point is made well in Hands.
In the first half of the book, Gottlieb outlines the main argument of his book and provides a critical analysis of many ethical writers in order to illustrate his point. His discussions are fair and honest-he credits each author for their strengths as well as their weaknesses with regards to his focus (the relationship of religion to politics and politics to religion), and does well to distinguish his personal beliefs and biases from those of others and from objective, certifiable data. Whether or not you agree with Professor Gottlieb's argument, his discussion of ethics, religion, and politics in Hands is well worth reading.
I recommend this book, in general, to anyone who is interested in the study of ethics. I particularly recommend this book to anyone interested in the topics of social movements and/or the (important) role of religion in our modern-day world. Also, because of the insightful and well-written chapters on breast cancer and disabilities, the civil rights movement, and the environmental movement, I would also recommend this book to anyone interested in studying any of these topics in specific, and, in general, to anyone interested in getting an perspective on some current ethical considerations and political movements.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews