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E-raamat: Pregnancy and Birth: Critical Theological Conceptions

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  • Formaat: 272 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Aug-2024
  • Kirjastus: SCM Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780334065395
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  • Formaat: 272 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Aug-2024
  • Kirjastus: SCM Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780334065395

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- A groundbreaking and much needed attempt to take pregnancy seriously as a site of theological attention.- A wonderful array of theological thinkers lend their voice, including Chine McDonald, Julie Gittoes and Margaret Kamitsuka.- Important and thoughtful resource for theologians and practitioners alike Pregnancy is a period of time that institutes great change in the lives of those who are pregnant. Regardless of whether a pregnancy concludes with the birth of a live child or not, there are experiences that are common for many people who are pregnant. Yet as a site of theological reflection pregnancy is underrepresented. This landmark book seeks to begin the conversation within theology about pregnancy, the positive and negative experiences, and the potential for pregnancy to be understood theologically. Chapters consider a number of avenues in this exploration, from early pregnancy loss to trauma in labour, from adoption to the end of reproductive years at the onset of menopause. Throughout, this book seeks to understand the resources that theology brings to the experiences of pregnancy as well as the situations of oppression and underrepresentation that currently exist. Allowing for intersections of race, parenting, childlessness, and disability, this book approaches pregnancy from different theological perspectives in order to complexify the theological response and engagement as well as produce constructive resources for both the academy and the church.Contributors include Chine McDonald, Julie Gittoes, Margaret Kamitsuka and Rachel Muers.

Arvustused

"This beautifully curated collection reveals the ambiguities, privileges, disruptions, pain, trauma, and silences that pregnant and 'un/pregnant' bodies experience in Christian discourse. I was moved and challenged by the poetic, personal, and critical reflections from surrogacy, abortion, trans pregnancy, single motherhood, fat bodies, Dalit women, to menopause that centre pregnancy and birth as sites of feminist theological meaning making." -- Dawn Llewellyn "While, from Jesus onwards, Christian teachers, mystics and preachers have drawn on the imagery of pregnancy and birth to reflect on faith, these topics have rarely received sustained theological investigation. This magnificent volume finally brings the common yet infinitely varied experiences of pregnancy and birth into the centre of theological and spiritual enquiry, including surrogacy, adoption, single, queer and masculine birthing and parenting, and much more besides. Combining first person autobiographical and autoethnographic reflections, poetry, biblical, historical and theological research with pastoral, liturgical and practical discussion, the book as a whole opens up a dizzying range of perspectives, never closing enquiry down but always opening up fresh angles and important questions. I welcome this groundbreaking text and congratulate the editors and contributors on a fine achievement. I expect it to create a stir of excitement and much ongoing study, reflection and prayer." -- Nicola Slee Ambitious in scope, rigorous in its analysis, and generous in spirit, this book makes a crucial contribution to our understanding of birth, pregnancy, and embodiment itself. Eschewing the binaries that have long defined these subjects, the book achieves a richer, more hospitable, more disruptive, and ultimately more prophetic account of lifes beginnings. -- Jennifer Banks

Acknowledgements
Contributors
Wombs of our Own

Conception by Karen ODonnell and Claire Williams

Concept Conception: It All Begins Somewhere by Ruth Wells

Theological Pregnancies
The Body is (Not Quite) One by Rachel Muers
My Body in Parts by Ruth Wells
Pregnancies Human and Divine: The Flesh of Mary and the Body of Christ by
Karen ODonnell
This is my Body by Ruth Wells
Reading 1 Timothy 2:15 Through the Lens of Black Pregnancy and WomanistCare
by Victoria Omotoso
Reflections on the Travail of the Earth in Romans 8, and Humans role in
Companioning this Labour by Christopher Southgate
Kenotic Invitation by Ruth Wells
Groaning in LabourAwaiting Adoption: Pregnancy to Adoption as a Paradigm
for Understanding Gods Action in the World by Helen Collins
Beyond Borderland by Ruth Wells
Her Bleeding Stopped: The Embodied Borderland of the Menopause by Julie
Gittoes

Spiritual Pregnancies
Christian Spirituality in Pregnancy and Childbirth by Alison Price
Psycho-spiritual Formation in Pregnancy: A Letter to a Younger, Christian
Friend by Jo Winn-Smith
Pregnancy, Motherhood, and Mysticism: Reading the Texts of Angela of Foligno
by Michael Hahn and Lydia Shahan

Disruptive Pregnancies
Surrogacy, Secrecy, and the Sin of the Autonomous Self by Danielle Tumminio
Hansen
Undignified Flesh: An Indignant Theology of Single Pregnancy by Karen Bray
Dissolving Domination by Ruth Wells
Pregnant and Fat by Sarah Pritchard
Voluminous by Ruth Wells
Pregnant Masculinities: Utilising the Frame of Solidarity to Navigate
Between the Dominant Frames of Dysphoria and Euphoria in Narratives of
Transmasculine Pregnancy by Alex Clare-Young
The Seahorse by Ruth Wells

Ethical Pregnancies
Solidarity with the Stinking Womb: Contemplating the Experiences of
Pregnant Dalit Women and Hagar by Eve Parker
Threatening Womb by Ruth Wells
The Precarity and Moral Obligations of Pregnancy by Margaret D. Kamitsuka
A Response to Karen ODonnells and Margaret Kamitsukas Feminist
Reimaginings of Eschatology through the Lens of Pregnancy Loss by Susannah
Cornwall
Liminal Life: A Theological Response to Preimplanation Pregnancy, Embryo
Disposal and Loss by Abigail Maguire
Liminality by Ruth Wells
Abortion and Theology: The Power Effects of the Abstract by Noirin MacNamara
and Kellie Turtle

Painful Pregnancies
Groaning Witness: A Theological Response to Adverse Prenatal Diagnosis by
Heather Morgan
The Mind of Christ: Self-Emptying, Kenosis, and Pregnancy Sickness by Chine
McDonald
Hyperemesis Gravidarum Haiku by Ruth Wells
May this mother, remembering no longer her anguish, trust you in all
things: A Liturgical Response to Birth Trauma by Alice Watson
Attending to Silence and Screaming: A Theology from Mental Illness in
Pregnancy by Beth Allison-Glenny
Bodies and All That by Ruth Wells

Afterbirth by Claire Williams and Karen ODonnell
Karen ODonnell is Academic Dean at Westcott House, Cambridge. A feminist, ecumenical, practical theologian, her interdisciplinary research interests span theology, spirituality, and pedagogy. She is the author of several books with SCM Press, including The Dark Womb, which was longlisted for the 2023 Michael Ramsey Prize. Claire Williams is a teacher and researcher at Regents Theological College, and the author of Peculiar Discipleship.