Available Formats
Solidarity and Power: Feminist Approaches to Religious Ethics
By (Author) Rosemary Kellison
Edited by Shannon Dunn
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
4th September 2025
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Comparative religion
Feminism and feminist theory
241
Paperback
304
Width 152mm, Height 229mm
This volume illuminates the voices of a diverse group of contemporary feminist scholars from a wide range of religious traditions to demonstrate the value and necessity of feminist contributions to the field of ethics.
Contributors explore questions and debates that have long perplexed religious ethicists, such as the relationship between descriptive (how do we act) and normative (how should we act) inquiry, and how those can be productively addressed by drawing on resources from feminist work. In addition to contributing to these scholarly conversations, the book highlights a number of case studies from different religious communities on various moral issues to actively demonstrate the ways in which feminist approaches enhance religious ethics contribution to religious studies, support the decolonization of religious ethics, and provide resources for innovative responses to these contemporary questions and debates.
The themes of solidarity and power and the connecting threads throughout the volume. Historically, solidarity has been an essential aspect of justice-oriented political projects, but feminists critical attention to power and differenceincluding attention to who is allowed to speak for/with particular communitiessimultaneously raises questions regarding the possibility of genuine solidarity. While religious ethicists have traditionally considered normative work to be a central aspect of the field of religious ethics, other scholars of religion have questioned whether scholarly attempts to forge solidarity and promote justice are themselves inevitably exercises of colonial power and control. The book explores the tensions and debates that arise from these considerations, ultimately suggesting that a feminist ethical approach enables scholarship that accounts for all of these concerns.
Exploring critical issues such as abortion, poverty, the carceral state, war, sexual violence and abuse, race, and social justice movements, this volume provides accessible entry points for advanced undergraduates to contemplate the unique contributions of feminist and womanist scholarship. In addition, scholars, graduate students, and researchers will benefit not only from the books diverse set of examples, but from the contributors commitment to intervening in methodological and theoretical debates that continue to challenge thinkers in both religious ethics and the larger field of religious studies.
Rosemary Kellison is associate professor of religion at Florida State University and author of Expanding Responsibility for the Just War: A Feminist Critique (2019).
Shannon Dunn is department chair and professor of religious studies at Gonzaga University and has most recently published essays in Soundings: An Interdisciplinary Journal, and the Journal of Religious Ethics.