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E-raamat: Gratitude, Injury, and Repair in a Pandemic Age: An Interreligious Dialogue

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  • Formaat: 202 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 02-Jan-2025
  • Kirjastus: Georgetown University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781647124816
  • Formaat - PDF+DRM
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  • Formaat: 202 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 02-Jan-2025
  • Kirjastus: Georgetown University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781647124816

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Scholarly insight and reflection on finding meaning in the psychological impact of the COVID-19 pandemic

The COVID-19 pandemic caused a horrific loss of life and had tremendous, long-lasting psychological effects. Diagnoses of anxiety and mental illness are now at much higher levels than they were in 2019. For believers, the pandemic raised questions about the nature of God, increasing the need for pastoral care and resources to make sense of such a deep disruption.

Gratitude, Injury, and Repair in a Pandemic Age presents twelve reflections on the pandemic and its impact from the Jewish, Muslim, Hindu, nonbelieving, and Christian traditions. The chapters offer scholarly insight and rigor while also incorporating personal reflections on what it means to work through such a life-changing event and make meaning in the moments when life confronts us as partial, fragmented, and fragile.

This edited volume will be valuable for students and scholars of multiple faith traditions, as well as those engaged in interreligious dialogue and theology.

Muu info

"Taking a kaleidoscopic approach to the intersection of gratitude, injury, and repair, this collection of essays by a diverse roster of scholars considers themes of illness, trauma, racism, healthcare, politics, sacramentality, and grace in a manner that makes a superior contribution toand indeed transcendsthe genre of pandemic assessment literature. Ethicists, theologians, sociologists, and chaplains will find much to engage hereinas will anyone seeking a fresh means of making sense of the COVID era." Lucinda Mosher, Director, Master of Arts in Interreligious Studies Program, Hartford International University for Religion and Peace
Introduction
Michael Reid Trice and Patricia O'Connell Killen

1. Reflections on Gratitude, Injury, and Restoration in a Pandemic Age
Mona Siddiqui

2. Dislocating Gratitude: A Meditation from a Blasted Mountain
Patricia O'Connell Killen

3. "Grateful to the Proselyte": Jews among Gentiles in an Age of Injury
Nathanael Vette

4. Conflicting Civil Religions: Bellah, Lincoln, and the Alt-RightToday's
American Dilemma
James Spickard

5. On Not Letting a Pandemic Go to Waste: Theory for the Sick and Dying
Susan Abraham

6. Interdependence, Gratitude, and Justice: Hindu Perspectives
Anantanand Rambachan

7. Gratitude as a Revolutionary Act of Resistance
Edward Donalson III

8. Marked by 2020: Disorientation and Reorientation in a Pandemic Age
Jaisy A. Joseph

9. Trauma, Post-traumatic Growth, and Gratitude in the Time of the COVID-19
Pandemic
Kristi A. Lee

10. Traumatic Ontology: COVID-19Epochal, Societal, and Personal
Transformation
Douglas F. Peduti, SJ

11. Our Pandemic Age, Relationships, and Forgetting
Michael Reid Trice

List of Contributors
Michael Reid Trice, PhD, is Spehar-Halligan professor in constructive theology and founding director of the Center for Ecumenical and Interreligious Engagement at Seattle University. He publishes and presents in the areas of religious literacy, pluralism, and structural analysis. He is currently co-editing a multi-author volume on leadership (Georgetown University Press, 2026). As of Fall 2024, he teaches in the Executive Leadership Program through the Albers School of Business and Economics at Seattle University. Patricia O'Connell Killen, PhD, is a professor of religion, emerita, and a Humanities Faculty Fellow at Pacific Lutheran University. She has published extensively on religion in the Pacific Northwest, Catholicism in North America, and faith-inspired higher education. Most recently, she co-edited Religion at the Edge: Nature, Spirituality, and Secularity in the Pacific Northwest (2022).