Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Part 1 Types of postmodern theology
- 1 Theology and the condition of postmodernity
- 2 Anglo-American postmodernity
- 3 Postliberal theology
- 4 Postmetaphysical theology
- 5 Deconstructive theology
- 6 Reconstructive theology
- 7 Feminist theology
- 8 Radical orthodoxy
- Part 2 Christian doctrine in postmodern perspective
- Index
1 - Theology and the condition of postmodernity
from Part 1 - Types of postmodern theology
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 May 2006
- Frontmatter
- Part 1 Types of postmodern theology
- 1 Theology and the condition of postmodernity
- 2 Anglo-American postmodernity
- 3 Postliberal theology
- 4 Postmetaphysical theology
- 5 Deconstructive theology
- 6 Reconstructive theology
- 7 Feminist theology
- 8 Radical orthodoxy
- Part 2 Christian doctrine in postmodern perspective
- Index
Summary
PREFACE TO POSTMODERNITY: CONCEPT, CULTURE, OR CONDITION?
Those who attempt to define or to analyze the concept of postmodernity do so at their own peril. In the first place, postmoderns reject the notion that any description or definition is “neutral.” Definitions may appear to bask in the glow of impartiality, but they invariably exclude something and hence are complicit, wittingly or not, in politics. A definition of postmodernity is as likely to say more about the person offering the definition than it is of “the postmodern.” Second, postmoderns resist closed, tightly bounded “totalizing” accounts of such things as the “essence” of the postmodern. And third, according to David Tracy “there is no such phenomenon as postmodernity.” There are only postmodernities. Given these three points, the task of writing an introduction may seem to be well nigh impossible: “Abandon hope all ye who enter here!”
In fact, “postmodern” has become a gregarious adjective, and can often be seen in the company of such respectable terms as “literature,” “philosophy,” “architecture,” “art,” “history,” “science,” “cinema” – and, yes, even “biblical studies” and “theology. ” But what does the qualifier “postmodern” mean and how does it work? Does it carry the same force when linked to history as to theology, to art as to biblical studies? Typically, introductory studies of postmodernity take one of two routes: some follow its growth and trajectory in a single domain (for example, architecture, literature); others seek to give a theoretical account across a number of domains. With respect to the latter strategy, there is a further divergence: between theories that describe a process in the history of ideas, on the one hand, and socioeconomic processes, on the other.
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- The Cambridge Companion to Postmodern Theology , pp. 3 - 25Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003
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