For most of Christian history, the incarnation designated Christ as God made man. The obvious connection between God and the male body too often excluded women and the female body. In Flesh Made Word, Emily A. Holmes displays how medieval women writers expanded traditional theology through the incarnational practice of writing. Holmes draws inspiration for feminist theology from the writings of these medieval women mystics as well as French feminist philosophers of écriture féminine . The female body is then prioritized in feminist Christology, rather than circumvented. Flesh Made Word is a fresh, inclusive theology of the incarnation.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction, The Problem of Incarnation
1 Attending to Word and Flesh, An Inclusive Incarnation
2 Hadewijch of Brabant and the Mother of Love
3 Angela of Foligno Writing the Body of Christ
4 Writing Annihilation with Marguerite Porete
5 Transcendence Incarnate, Apophatic Bodies and the Apophatic Christ
Bibliography
Index
Über den Autor
Emily A. Holmes is Associate Professor, Department of Religion and Philosophy at Christian Brothers University and coauthor of Women, Writing, Theology: Transforming a Tradition of Exclusion. She lives in Memphis, Tennessee.