Apophatic Bodies
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Chris Boesel
About this book
The ancient doctrine of negative theology or apophasis—the attempt to describe God by speaking only of what cannot be said about the divine perfection and goodness—has taken on new life in the concern with language and its limits that preoccupies much postmodern philosophy, theology, and related disciplines. How does this mystical tradition intersect with the concern with material bodies that is simultaneously a focus in these areas? This volume pursues the unlikely conjunction of apophasis and the body, not for the cachet of the “cutting edge” but rather out of an ethical passion for the integrity of all creaturely bodies as they are caught up in various ideological mechanisms—religious, theological, political, economic—that threaten their dignity and material well-being. The contributors, a diverse collection of scholars in theology, philosophy, history, and biblical studies, rethink the relationship between the concrete tradition of negative theology and apophatic discourses widely construed. They further endeavor to link these to the theological theme of incarnation and more general issues of embodiment, sexuality, and cosmology. Along the way, they engage and deploy the resources of contextual and liberation theology, post-structuralism, postcolonialism, process thought, and feminism. The result not only recasts the nature and possibilities of theological discourse but explores the possibilities of academic discussion across and beyond disciplines in concrete engagement with the well-being of bodies, both organic and inorganic. The volume interrogates the complex capacities of religious discourse both to threaten and positively to draw upon the material well-being of creation.
Topics
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Frontmatter
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CONTENTS
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
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Introduction
1 - Negative Theology: Unfolding Traditions
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The Cloud of the Impossible: Embodiment and Apophasis
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Subtle Embodiments: Imagining the Holy in Late Antiquity
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‘‘Being Neither Oneself Nor Someone Else’’: The Apophatic Anthropology of Dionysius the Areopagite
59 - Incarnations: Body/Image
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Bodies without Wholes: Apophatic Excess and Fragmentation in Augustine’s City of God
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Bodies Still Unrisen, Events Still Unsaid: A Hermeneutic of Bodies without Flesh
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In the Image of the Invisible
117 - More Mysterious Bodies: Veils, Voids, Visions
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‘‘The Body Is No Body’’
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Revisioning the Body Apophatically: Incarnation and the Acosmic Naturalism of Habad Hasidism
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Bodies of the Void: Polyphilia and Theoplicity
200 - Apophatic Ethics: Whose Body, Whose Speech?
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The Metaphysics of the Body
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Emptying Apophasis of Deception: Considering a Duplicitous Kierkegaardian Declaration
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Feminist Theology and the Sensible Unsaying of Mysticism
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The Infinite Found in Human Form: Intertwinings of Cosmology and Incarnation
286 - Love Stories: Unspeakable Relations, Infinite Freedom
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The Apophasis of Divine Freedom: Saving ‘‘the Name’’ and the Neighbor from Human Mastery
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Let It Be: Finding Grace with God through the Gelassenheit of the Annunciation
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Intimate Mysteries: The Apophatics of Sensible Love
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NOTES
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CONTRIBUTORS
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