Resisting Theologies and the Everyday: Addressing Inequalities in Constructive, Practical, and Liberative Approaches
By (Author) Dr Wren Radford
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
T.& T.Clark Ltd
24th July 2025
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Christian life and practice
230
Hardback
224
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
This powerful volume provides dynamic ways of constructing theologies of resistance and liberation by engaging with the everyday practices of marginalised communities. In doing so, this collection of theological experts reject abstracted concepts of bodes and taxonomies of race, gender, sexuality, and disability. Readers will find this a dynamic book with a variety of approaches that provide dynamic ways of constructing theologies of resistance and liberation. Experiences of marginalisation have provided a powerful reference point for developing theologies of justice and liberation; however, theological and political frameworks often reduce the complexity of lived experiences into categories and themes. Daily practices of resisting and surviving are frequently considered too fleshy, domestic, or banal to be of theological meaning. Therefore, Radford and their coterie of academics draw on understandings of the everyday in feminist, womanist, Latinx, and decolonial theologies as well as in cultural theory; this allows critical reflection on how theological approaches can shape alternative relations to self, society, and the sacred. In recognising the lived and felt realities of struggling against oppressive colonial and racialised systems, contributors engage with academic and activist debates about the possibilities of remaking social relations and creating other ways of knowing and being. From Black theology to indigenous women tackling climate change to queer clergy in South Africa, this volume holds together differences in contributors approaches, modelling the view that there is not just one form of resistance, nor a single approach to constructing theology.
Wren Radford is a Lecturer in Liberal Arts at the University of Manchester, UK