Entangled Fidelities: Towards a Relational Christian Realism for the Public Sphere
This article articulates a new concept within public and political theology, namely relational Christian realism, which it encapsulates within the notion of Entangled Fidelities. It proposes that the interlocking of a series of highly problematic areas of current human experience, reflected, for example, in the ongoing economic and environmental crises, require a reformulation of the Christian realism tradition. In this reformulation, aspects of this tradition are brought into close and critical dialogue with key voices from philosophy, sociology, and theology: namely, H Richard Niebuhr, Bruno Latour, and Manuel Castells. The dynamics and methodologies associated with relational Christian realism are further explicated with reference to a number of case studies. The article concludes by suggesting that this new (and as yet speculative) conceptual term needs fuller explication and development with regard to empirical research in a number of cross-over fields in which faith-based and no faith-based social actors are engaged in a new politics of postsecular rapprochement.
Item Type | Article |
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Keywords | Christian realism, Bruno Latour, Manuel Castells, H. Richard Niebuhr, public policy, Radical Orthodoxy, postliberalism |
Departments, Centres and Research Units | Social, Therapeutic & Community Engagement (STaCS) |
Date Deposited | 09 Oct 2017 12:16 |
Last Modified | 21 May 2020 14:21 |