Assembling Futures: Economy, Ecology, Democracy, and Religion
Assembling Futures: Economy, Ecology, Democracy, and Religion
Assistant Professor of New Testament
George T. Cobb Professor of Constructive Theology
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Abstract
What is the relationship of religion to economy, ecology, and democracy? In our fraught moment, what critical questions of religion may help to assemble democratic processes, ecosystems, and economic structures differently? What possible futures might emerge from transdisciplinary work across these traditionally siloed scholarly areas of interest? These essays reflect scholarly conversations among historians, political scientists, theologians, biblical studies scholars, and scholars of religion that transgress disciplinary boundaries to consider urgent matters expressive of the values, practices, and questions that shape human existence. The scholars participating in Assembling Futures: Economy, Ecology, Democracy and Religion recognize urgent imbrications of the global economy, multinational politics, and the materiality of ecological entanglements in assembling still possible futures for the earth. Precisely in their diversity of disciplinary starting points and ethical styles, the essays that follow enact their intersectional forcefield all the more vibrantly.
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Front Matter
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Introduction
Jennifer Quigley andCatherine Keller
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Our Place on Earth: Territory, Property, and the Sources of Human Entitlement
Paulina Ochoa Espejo
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Democratic Socialism in the USA: History, Politics, Religion, and Theory
Gary Dorrien
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Regifting the Divine Economy: Transitioning Petroleum-Based Energy Regimes
Marion Grau
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The Immanence and Transcendence of Christianity, Capitalism, and Economic Democracy: Alternatives to Ecological Devastation
Joerg Rieger
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Sacred Obligations: On the Theopolitics of Debt and Sovereignty
Devin Singh
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Curating Futures: The Curatorial as a Theological Concept
Daniel A. Siedell
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The Costs of Citizenship: Politeuma in the Letter to the Philippians
Jennifer Quigley
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Ambiguous, Amorous, Agonistic, Not Able: An Alternative to Adamant, Apathetic, Antagonistic, Able Society
Eunchul Jung
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What Does Evolutionary Biology Tell Us about Relationality as a Basis for Economics and Politics?
Marcia Pally
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In Whose Interest? Matthew 25:14–30 as a Theo-Economic Parable Hard at Work
Hilary Mckane
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Creeps of the Apocalypse: Climate, Capital, Democracy
Catherine Keller
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End Matter
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