Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 The Tourist: Popular Piety and Practice as a Package Deal
- Chapter 2 The Traveller: Modernist and Orthodox Theology as Interpretative Experience
- Chapter 3 The Exile: This Location = Dislocation
- Chapter 4 No City of God…
- Chapter 5 Rethinking Location and Christology
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index of Authors
- Index of Subjects
Foreword
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 The Tourist: Popular Piety and Practice as a Package Deal
- Chapter 2 The Traveller: Modernist and Orthodox Theology as Interpretative Experience
- Chapter 3 The Exile: This Location = Dislocation
- Chapter 4 No City of God…
- Chapter 5 Rethinking Location and Christology
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index of Authors
- Index of Subjects
Summary
Mike Crimshaw has come at the business of constructing a cross-cultural theology from a very different angle. His provocative text is written out of an experience of self-confessed marginality. That is not especially unusual. It is not uncommon for those who construct a cross-cultural or diasporic theology to feel as if they are on the edge of the received mainline discourse and inhabit a position of liminality. Where Crimshaw differs is his interest in a cross-cultural dialectic that is western and secular.
Some of Crimshaw's language is familiar enough to the stock run of theologians: there is plenty of talk about Cod and Christology. There is reference to Karl Barth, Dietrich Bonhoeffer, to neo-orthodoxy and death of Cod theologians. But then there is a line of difference. For those of us who are familiar with various movements of theological modernism, Crimshaw's use of the term may well seem idiosyncratic and perhaps jar – until it is recognized that his use of modernism comes not from theology but from architecture. Here is a sign of an alternative method and concern. Crimshaw draws upon secular texts to explore what a secular theology might look like in a world variously described as pre-modern, modern, postmodern and modern again after postmodernity. For the sake of his cross-cultural theology there is no sideways glance to current scholars working in this territory – and part of the reason for this preference lies in his interesting strategy of making use of literature to do with art and travel.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Bibles and BaedekersTourism, Travel, Exile and God, pp. vii - viiiPublisher: Acumen PublishingPrint publication year: 2008