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Full Description
This book focuses on St. Augustine as a worthwhile resource for thinking through the challenges and prospects of pluralism. The contributors speak to several dimensions of this organizing concept, understanding of which is advanced by engagement with Augustine. The volume brings together scholars from different disciplines, faith traditions, and political commitments, all of whom have deemed it worthwhile to return to Augustine to learn about a signature theme of common life in the twenty-first century. The chapters address a variety of topics including civic engagement, feminism, Black religious thought, domination, liberalism, and time. In an age of pluralism, the hope is to access the insights of the thinker who struggled with a plurality of desires, motivations, and political-theological imaginations, and to benefit from his thoughts. The book will be of particular interest to scholars of theology, philosophy, and political science.
Contents
Editors' Introduction: Scope, Focus, and Purpose 1. Would it Have Killed Augustine to be More Like Socrates? James Wetzel Part 1: Augustine. Alternative Pluralisms 2. Augustine's Flexibility in Encountering Pluralism Douglas Kries 3. The Philosophy and Politics of Universalism in the Time of Augustine Thomas Harmon 4. Augustine on Pagan and Christian Social Hierarchies Daniel E. Burns 5. E Pluribus Unum: Illiberal Pluralism at Cassiciacum Michael P. Foley Part 2: Augustinian Pluralism and Civic Engagement 6. Hopefully, Augustine Peter Iver Kaufman 7. Healing Hope: A Response to Peter Iver Kaufman Veronica Roberts Ogle 8. Augustine on Hope and Politics Michael Lamb 9. Augustine and Pluralism in a Globalized World Charles Mathewes 10. Augustine and the Christian Response to Nazism Paul Allen Part 3: Augustine and Black Religious Thought 11. Augustine in Dialogue with Frederick Douglass and Angela Davis on Human Freedom Ashleen Menchaca-Bagnulo 12. On Job and the Practical Problem of Suffering: Augustine and Martin Luther King, Jr. Compared Darren Yau 13. Africitas, or Fanon's Confession: Manicheism and Pluralism in Augustine and Frantz Fanon Chase Padusniak Part 4: Augustine, Identity, and Paradoxes of Domination 14. The Masters' Metaphors and the Afterlife of Slavery: Re-reading Augustine's 'Form of the Slave' Matthew Elia 15. Dominating Grief: An Ambiguously Augustinian Approach to Pregnancy Loss Patricia Grosse Brewer 16. Critique without Domination? Fraternal Correction as Augustinian Social Witness John Walker Part 5: Augustinian Feminism 17. Imitatio Christi as Humility: Augustine and Wollstonecraft toward a Pluralist Feminism Emily Dumler-Winckler 18. Too Late Have I Loved You: Misogyny, Sin, and Divinity in Confessions 6.15 Karmen MacKendrick 19. Obedience and Submission: Thinking with Augustine Vincent Lloyd Part 6: Augustine, Freedom, and Liberalism 20. Obscurity, Perplexity, and Plurality in Augustine's City of God Mary M. Keys 21. Decolonization and the Two Cities: Quijano, Augustine, and Paul Owen Anderson 22. Envy, Imagination, and the 'Eternal Flight of Equality: Tocqueville's Augustinian Perspective on Democracy's Path to Despotism and the Death of Pluralism Vince Bagnulo Part 7: Augustine and Pluralities of Time 23. African Temporalities: Race and the Augustinian Philosophy of Time Sean Hannan 24. In a Time of Reconciliation: Augustine and Jean-Francois Lyotard on Community Confession Boleslaw Z. Kabala and Kahlib Fischer. Index