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Luke Eberl 
11/13/2008

Val Emmich 
11/12/2008

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White Theology: Outing Supremacy in Modernity (Black Religion/Womanist Thought/Social Justice)
Palgrave Macmillan
$22.95



Introducing Black Theology of Liberation
Orbis Books
$17.00



A Black Theology of Liberation (Ethics and Society)
Orbis Books
$17.00



Reimagining the Human: Theological Anthropology in Response to Systemic Evil
Chalice Press
$34.99



God of the Oppressed
Orbis Books
$16.00



Theology for the Community of God
Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Company
$38.00


  
Being Human: Race, Culture, and Religion
by Dwight N. Hopkins

List Price: $21.00
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Paperback
Publisher: Augsburg Fortress Publishers

Dwight Hopkins, whose important work in Black Theology has mediated class theological concerns through the prism of African American culture, here offers a fresh take on theological anthropology. Rather than defined "the human" as one eternal or inviolable essence, however, Hopkins looks to the multiple and conflicting notions of the human in contemporary thought, and particularly three key variables: culture, self, and race. Hopkins' critical reframing of these concepts firmly locates human endeavor, development, transcendence, and liberation in the particular messiness of struggle and strife.


Customer Reviews:
 
Spirit-filled meditation on what it is to be human
Customer Rating: 5 out of 5 
In Being Human, Chicago theologian Dwight Hopkins explores what constitutes humanity and the human being as grounded in three realities -- culture, self, and race. Race and the specific experiences of those determined as black prove to be central to Hopkins' account of what the human self is and is called to be. Speaking as a white student of theology, the chapter on race was deeply unsettling, as the author exposes how pervasive racist assumptions and narratives are in even the most reflective and philosophical discourses in European culture. Quotations from heavyweights of the Enlightenment paint a disturbing and challenging picture of white refusal to participate in a unified human family.

These reflections on the categories of culture, self, and race take up much of the book and are followed by thirty rich pages that finally develop, with the aid of black folktales, a theological anthropology centered on care for and service of the poor. In Hopkins' forceful argument, failing in faithfulness to the downtrodden represents a fundamental break with what God has ordained humanity to be -- no other concerns can supersede this fundamental attribute of humanness.

Being Human has poweful things to say to a church that continues in many ways to deny the full humanity of its brothers and sisters of color. It also speaks prophetically to the material condition of all poor and working class people, whom God wishes to participate fully and equally in the Kingdom. Very highly recommended.




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