Identity and Marginality

Identity and Marginality
Rethinking Christianity in North East Asia
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Artikel-Nr:
9783631358597
Veröffentl:
2000
Seiten:
250
Autor:
Werner Ustorf
Gewicht:
330 g
Format:
210x148x32 mm
Serie:
121, Studien zur interkulturellen Geschichte des Christentums / Etudes d'histoire interculturelle du chri
Sprache:
Englisch
Beschreibung:

The Editors: Werner Ustorf is Professor of Mission at the Department of Theology of Birmingham University. He had been teaching previously at Hamburg and Heidelberg universities. His research interest is the history of the missionary movement. Currently his missiological focus is on western culture.
Toshiko Murayama from Japan is a doctoral research student at Birmingham's Department of Theology. She had been coordinating the Centre for the Study of North East Asian Missiology (Birmingham) from 1997 to 1999.
The rethinking of Christianity has a long tradition in Asia. This volume explores current theological trends and shifts in the perception of Christianity, mainly in China, Japan and Korea. The contributions come from east and west alike and address the question of the emergent shape of Christianity in the light of the experience of marginality and the search for identity. The theologies that play on the streets (for example Korean folklore and the Minjung Congregation Movement, the Buraku of Japan, the Confucian Christ in China and its so-called Culture Christians) are represented as well as programmatic theological discourses struggling with globalization and hegemonic images of Christ. Some of the contributors such as Kim Yong-Bock and R.S. Sugirtharajah are themselves exponents of new ways of Christian thought.
Contents: Imperialised interpretations of Christ and post-colonial discourse - The global market and missiology - Vasco da Gama and the periodization of history - The theology of the crown of thorns - The Three Self Movement - Christianity and Confucianism - The ordination of women in Japan.

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