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Mercedes
Lopes Interview with Irene Foulkes - defunct
Militarism and gender in Korea Intimacy and Eroticism in the Writings of Women Mystics Spirituality and Resistance. A Latin American feminist perspective Femininity in Men. Martha's Role in the Johannine Community Anther World is Possible Feminine Representation in the Discourse of Liberation Theology Popular Reading of the Bible and Woman The ministry of Mary Magdalene performable referring for the woman at the present time Ecofeminist Practices on America Latina. Com Irene Foulkes, para Revista
Mandrágora (Revista do Núcleo de Estudos da Mulher na América Latina –
NETMAL), São Bernardo do Campo, SP: UMESP, 2005, ... |
Colonial Masculinity: The 'Manly Englishman' and the 'Effeminate ...
But
it less does that than the reverse: the masculist attitudes in evidence seem
very familiar from British history; and their application in colonial
...
www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&se=gglsc&d=5000387207 - Similar pages - Note this |
The body as hermeneutical category: guidelines for a feminist hermeneutics of liberation.
by Nancy Cardoso Pereira. Ecumenical Review Issue three.
"Like land that needs
tilling--that is what the Bible is like for women. The Bible is difficult
terrain. Some parts are hard, and others are swampy ... yet there are countless
fertile places to be worked on. It is the task of women and men who believe it
is possible to remodel gender social relations to discover the liberating
fertility of the Bible. The Bible has to be worked in the same way as the land:
with tenacity, determination, wisdom and pleasureThe body as a hermeneutical category
For many centuries the importance of the body, of matter, has been devalued. Importance has always been given to the human "soul" or, in another generalizing view, a person's place in the socio-political structure and the economy. [not however among peasants, who always value the body] But history shows that the body has always been the main locus of the oppression and appropriation of women, as it has also been with other oppressed groups (for example indigenous and black peoples): this has been done through rape, aggression, denial, abuse, manipulation, idealization. [this is true because you cannot imprison the mind. As for the soul it is a philosophical concept] For this very reason, the body cannot be considered as a mere side-issue in any reading of the Bible which asks questions about gender relations. Life and death manifest themselves through the body. Restoring the physical body to its rightful place is a fundamental part of our affirmation of a real and sensual life. [restoration of the body, resurrection of the body]
The text is also a body, [equivocation] one that shows itself to (and hides itself from) its readers. Those readers are also living bodies [minds] entering into dialogue and struggling with that other body, the text. [it’s a wrestling match] Both reveal the tissue of their own body: as individual and social bodies, feminine and masculine. In the hermeneutical process conducted from a corporeal perspective, the bodies sometimes meet and celebrate in the same way as we gladly gather a good harvest from the land.[a third take body, text, land] Sometimes they detest each other, because they are disappointed that there is no fruit, or that the only fruit is sour and of no use to anyone. At times, the body holds out its arms, waiting for the other body to do the same ... but there is no response. [this paragraph is romance, metaphor but studiously avoids the idea that the land can exist for itself, can be wild and that is appropriate]
Reading the [text of the] passion and resurrection of Jesus with [as an instance of] the lacerated bodies of Latin America in mind requires us to contemplate the raped bodies of men and women, boys and girls, [requires us also to contemplate his disfigurement, that he looked like no man] and to feel the urgent need for resurrection [salvation] of these bodies now. The recreation of the body as a place of sacred revelation means accepting and affirming the liberating dynamics of enjoyment, pleasure without shame, without the limits imposed by shame, stereotypes and oppressive censorship. [is this in bed at home or on TV and in church?]
The subjects and their daily stories in the hermeneutical process
In the same way we approach the Bible as though it is land to be worked, we need to take a closer look at our daily lives: there are fertile parts, while others are full of stones; there are deserts and swamps ... but also great abundance. [this is the usual self doubt of religion, the problem is that the landscape is being viewed as the flawed life is viewed, but the landscape whether swamp or mountain or desert is not flawed because it is so, but it is so because it is so. You cannot remake it, but can adapt to it. so there is no parallel between the body and the land.] What are the assumptions her about the landscape if the text is to be exploited with it.
[The landscape of the body so called and of the text, its androcentric formula are paramount in the Renaissance poets who celebrate the woman as the land within which we can read also text That is the land is a text of which the woman is an example, we conquer both and enjoy both, but the text is that we do so It is as much a mistake to think the andro penetration of causes all negative as it is to think the gyno all passive and negative. The andro force provides initiatives of intention invention sanctuary and preserve as well as war and domination..lovemaking as an act of conquest discovery in the love voyage.]
We are not impartial readers; we are people with bodies, colour, sex, age; our body works, suffers and experiences pleasure, whether we like our body or not, whether others find pleasure in it or not. [as if this were determined outside, not inside]
We want to approach the texts through the diversity and richness of our daily lives, with its apparent absence of scientific rigour and assumed partiality.[ the texts are poetry and history, not science] The experience of daily life also provides a dynamic way of seeing the structure and fabric of texts; it looks deeper to the more hidden aspects that are untouched by super-structural, super-objective and super-sociological interpretations.
So just as life, the texts are also the product of day-to-day relationships cut through by mechanisms of domination: of one sex over another, of one class over another, of one ethnic group over another, of one generation over another. These relations cannot be reduced to one category or arranged hierarchically. We need to work with the plurality of dimensions and systems that appear in the texts--and in our own lives. In this way, we can discover the visible and the invisible, and the many crises and differences that our faces, voices and bodies reflect ... this is what builds and conditions history, and the same goes for our reading of the Bible and our hermeneutics.
The hermeneutics of deconstruction and reconstruction
How can we discover the abundance of the earth? Where it allows life to germinate and grow? For this to happen, we need to uproot anything which gets in the way of its abundance, [abundance by destruction, sounds a little androcentric] anything which disturbs its balance [assuming earth is a balance, not a maelstrom] or is an obstacle to its fertility. Only then will it be possible to sow again and work the land to produce the fruits of life.
We approach the Bible as though it were land to be worked, with tools that help us to receive the fruits of life. Going beyond exegetical methods, with all their limitations and possibilities, gender theories have shown themselves to be fundamentally important in helping us to understand the land on which we work, its fertility and also its sterility.[the metaphor fails. There is no sterile earth. Consider the last words of David, “whoever touches sthorns uses a tool of iron or the shaft of a spear; they are burned up where they lie” II Sam 23.7
Gender theories reveal the roles, identities, functions and relations that society attributes [this is the only absolute cowed too, society attributes] to men and women and understands that these attributes are a social construction, one that can be deconstructed and reconstructed on another basis and using other criteria. A feminist hermeneutics that examines the issue of gender asks questions such as: How do gender relations operate in the text? What are the "invisible" gender relations? How are the identities of women and men constructed? What attributes are they given? What stereotypes are present? What are the conditions of life actually like in practice? [do gender theories recognize transcendence?]Is it that the Bible is useful for establishing this new identity because it gives a context and forum, a license for its discussion, what Emily Dickinson long before achieved by ignoring.]
We have to work at different levels to try to perceive the motivations and the normative intentions behind the texts: the story being narrated expresses the narrator's interpretation and understanding of the events being narrated; there is no reason to assume that what the text says is an accurate description of what women's lives are really like. The texts often portray ideal women or evil women as two constant, opposing extremes. Ironically, texts that seem to be favourable to women could be based on stereotypes of female identity (the seductive woman, the self sacrificing mother, and so on).
This approach needs to consider power relations and social and literary structures in a dynamic way so that it does not simply adopt the perspective that women are victims. The challenge is to understand and analyze the flow of power in a particular social or literary structure: power is not an absolute and static thing, rather it is a series of forces that move between--or against, or on or with--the various social subjects. Women also exercise power, often expressed in the form of resistance and survival, and they are never purely the victims of men and structures. And they can also be participants in their own subordination. [and of course they can be autonomous decision makers, Anna, Lib, Momo]
Analysis of gender social relations asks questions about the flow of power; I see here the confluence not only of relations between the sexes, but also between the ethnic groups, social classes, cultures and generations that form humanity, in all its complexity.
Some texts will turn out to be sterile for women. These texts provide no possibility of germination. When the text is deconstructed, and the earth fresh and clean, you can see that the material that has been there for years has caused the land to become sterile. [textual pollution incapable of cleansing or remediation due to toxicity, eg. A nuclear dump] It needs to be uprooted. [metaphor unclear, is the text uprooted but the land still sterile? Rather the land needs to be uprooted] The land can then be fed with other inputs, it needs to be ploughed and turned over to restore its balance [its acidity/alkalinity, fertility, nitrogenity] and, who knows, perhaps its capacity to germinate the fruits of life. As we excavate the land, [we act as archeologists, dig up graves] we find the stories of women, [indigenous] mutilated bodies that have been buried and hidden for centuries [grave romance. One looks for the bodies, the bones, the pot shards, the middens and now the dna as good western folks do, but desecrate further their graves]
In this process of deconstruction, we draw on other hermeneutical elements such as inter-textuality (use of information from other texts), intra-textuality (texts within the text) and extra-textuality (extra-canonical documents, for example, the gnostic gospels). [DECONSTRUCTING HOMER]
This agricultural work requires us not only to "clean up" and get to know the text ... We must go on to ask about the possibility of germination.[the notion is the text is underwritten with androgisms and overwritten with….]And this is how the process of reconstruction begins. Above all, it will mean reformulating the paradigms of interpretation and using new paradigms that allow other interpretations of the message or messages in the text.
The fact of reconstructing a text, of making it different from one that has for years been accepted as law and used to distort or limit the freedom of women to participate in history, [two things, its being and its use] places feminist hermeneutics of liberation in the position of challenging the traditional schemes of theology and church structures. [prior this was societal relations, now contracted to church] In this sense, feminist hermeneutics represents the reconstruction of history and women's participation in it, by women who are no longer prepared to accept that they should be treated as though they are a minority and who are prepared to take responsibility for their plot of land: their body, their mind, their decisions, their dignity.
The body as hermeneutical category: guidelines for a feminist hermeneutics of liberation
The women and men who read the texts from the standpoint of their daily experiences, their own particular histories and communities, and their relationships with others, make a commitment to deconstruct and reconstruct the meaning of the text, turning it into a human place that brings people together. That does not mean we have to eliminate all ambiguities, or homogenize the styles and resources of texts. To reconstruct the text is to make it into a tool for liberation, to leave the path open to alternative interpretations and so to invalidate any attempts to control the text and its message.A hermeneutics that questions the concept of biblical authority
God is revealed in the Bible just as he is in the land ... but neither the Bible nor the land are God. The divinity is an inscrutable mystery. [thus the argument goes, that mystery justifies all the common denominators we seek to bring to bear, for all are equal as human approaches] Our approaches to the sacred are human approaches, mediated by our culture and our daily lives.[except that the Jewish nation was a created cultural vehicle to reveal this revelation, the voice of God and none other. So this hermenautic is anti semetic?] Nobody can define this mystery and declare the absolute [the meaning of absolute here is relative] truth. The text contains the word of God but it is not itself the word of God, because the word of God is more than a written text. [This is really saying that there is no word of God, only human apporaches to it.logos, rhema, but not rabbinical]
For women, it is fundamentally important to recognize that the Bible contains passages that are merely circumstantial and not normative. [Certainly this is the case as is known by all except the simple. Whey Paul says they are his words and not Gods we have a case] A patriarchal text that [implicitly. Other that Paul telling women to shut up] justifies discrimination against women cannot be normative, because it is contrary to the liberating spirit of the gospel. Nor can the oppressive cultural and social traditions of those who interpret the texts be portrayed as normative guidelines deriving from the text.
The revelation is good news and, because it is real, it is dynamic and changing. It is not limited to the text, but aims to promote the meeting of the word of God in the text with the word of God present in the daily lives of communities, [that is the word of God is relational, situational] women and men, boys and girls, in the lives of different peoples with their own religious cultures and traditions. That is why it is important for the community reading the text to discern which elements are specific to the context of the text, and which elements of it are relevant to their own context. [only relevant if the latter]
The revelation expresses itself through the recreation [re-creation] of the text, as the product of the liberating meeting between the bodies of the texts and the bodies of its readers.
The feminist hermeneutics of liberation is not our exclusive discovery. It is the fruit of a dialogue between feminist and liberation movements of Latin America and other continents. We want the land of the Bible to be converted into an Abya Yala for men and women, into an enriched and abundant land and soil, fertile for the liberating word: land which is no longer sterile and dead, land where new fruits of faith and spirituality can be harvested.
Women have heard what has been said ... now it is for us to say it!
This article is the result of a collective effort by the first Latin American conference of women biblical specialists in Bogota, Colombia, in February 1995. Many women contributed to putting these hermeneutical guidelines together: Elsa Tamez, Mercedes Brancher, Ana Maria Rizzante Gallazzi, Nancy Cardoso Pereira, Rebeca Montemayor, Irene Foulkes, Alicia Winters, Luz Gimenez, Debora Garcia, Violeta Rocha, Josefina Caviedes, Maribel Pertuz, Veronica Rozzotto.
We are on our way. We are learning to read the Bible in this way ... being faithful to ourselves, to our struggles and our liberation movements, and especially to the women in our churches and countries. We still have to battle with theories and procedures, against authorities and the limits they impose. The texts from this conference express our personal and collective efforts and we would like them to be part of the dialogue accompanying Latin America's biblical journey.
Ecumenical Review, The, July, 2002 by Nancy Cardoso Pereira
COPYRIGHT 2002 World Council of Churches
COPYRIGHT 2002 Gale Group
Ecofeminism in Latin America
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Founded in 1970, Orbis Books endeavors to publish works that enlighten. the mind, nourish the spirit, and challenge the conscience. The publishing ... www.maryknollmall.org/chapters/1-57075-636-8.pdf - Supplemental Result - Similar pages - Note this |
by Ivone Gebara (Author), David Molineaux (Translator)
Ecofeminism: a Latin American perspective
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Robbins, Bruce Warren. PH.D., Southern Methodist University, 1991.
My perspective in this is that a thirst for acceptance dupes team players, negating "all theology is joy because it is reflection on the grace of God"(Barth).
Pettiness accompanies the fall of evangelicals. This Sunday at the close of the CRC service there was an after-benediction where prepared statement was read: "Over the past several months it has become increasingly apparent that the elders’ vision for the church is significantly different from the pastor’s vision for the church and both the elders and the pastor are discerning that the relationships have become strained to the point that effective ministry seems impossible and it is best to pursue separate directions."
After seeking a new pastor when the one before retired they sought for over a year and gave their selection two years and a half. These churches are in the same shredder as the academic who says "Charles Williams is sometimes called a Christian, that is until you read his biography or anything about him frankly" (20.05). They do thus with Isaac Newton, John Milton and William Blake, all Christians. It is always the misnomer of Reformed thought not to be reading the thing itself. Williams' character of the Archdeacon in War in Heaven is par excellence the character of the Christian who stands against the powers, "certainly He wills him," the Archdeacon said, "since He wills that Persimmons shall be whatever he seems to choose."