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Poetics of the Flesh

(2015)

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  1. Paul’s Flesh: A Disabled Reading of Flesh/spirit Dualism.Kai D. Moore - 2021 - Feminist Theology 29 (2):130-139.
    This article considers the Pauline construction of a “spiritual body” in 1 Corinthians 15 and his flesh/spirit dualism more generally in light of Paul’s probable disability. I suggest that this rhetoric functioned as a strategy for Paul to claim social power in his social context by deemphasizing his physical presence, and thus reflects a negotiation with cultural patterns of disability abjection rather than a meaningful part of Christian teaching. Because of the active harm done by these dualistic constructions, however unintentional (...)
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  • Is Caravaggio a queer theologian? Paul’s conversion on the way to Damascus.Luis Menéndez-Antuña - 2018 - Critical Research on Religion 6 (2):132-150.
    Queer theology has not paid enough attention to queer sex, how queers understand sexual intimate relationships outside hetero/homonormative frameworks, and more importantly, what notions of relationality with Otherness undergird those experiences and practices. This contribution exemplifies a trajectory of visualization—a theoretically based approach to reading art—where the practices of barebacking and cruising in queer subcultures trigger a reading of Caravaggio’s Conversion on the Way the Damascus that, in turn, reads the biblical text in terms of radical hospitality to Otherness. Barebacking (...)
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  • From Argentina to Scotland to Mexico: Indecent Theology and Erotic Phenomenology at the Mexico-US Border.Alejandro Stephano Escalante - 2018 - Feminist Theology 26 (3):213-228.
    During an immersion course at the Mexico-US border in January 2015, I encountered the stark juxtaposition between ‘liberation theologies’ and ‘library theologies.’ The gulf that separates these two is not just a class barrier, but is also racialized and linguistic. This article argues that in order to bring the indecent theology of Marcella Althaus-Reid to places like the borderlands, a theological bridge must be constructed that takes seriously both of the contexts being connected. Here I argue that the theological turn (...)
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