
- 190 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
This book presents ecological insights drawn from a reading of Julian of Norwich, considering how effectively she can help us in our current plight. The argument is that to address the ecological crisis with the mindset that created it will only cause more problems, and that to really undo the harm humanity has done and continues to do will take a transformation of selfhood and hence of perception, from the Gestell, technological self that is the child of the Enlightenment to the porous self that we truly are, underneath our buffered, separated, controlling and lonely exterior. The author suggests Julian of Norwich's text Revelations of Divine Love has the power to effect this transformation if we can learn to read it as disciples, not masters, just as Julian received and responded to her revelations as a performative, porous, receptive disciple. The chapters describe the technological mindset and its causal relationship with the ecological crisis, and articulate in detail how, if they are to transform us, we must read the Julian texts, taking first steps away from our technological selves as we do so. The book then takes significant passages from Julian and reads them in the performative, porous way that has been recommended. It will be of particular interest to scholars of theology and ecology, as well as medieval mysticism.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover Page
- Half-Title Page
- Series Page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 Defining the Ecological Challenge as Our Buffered, Gestell Subjectivity
- 2 Developing a Post-Ricoeurian Hermeneutical Approach
- 3 Julian's Wounds
- 4 The Eighth Revelation
- 5 The Fourteenth Revelation
- Conclusion: Julian's Porosity as a Basis for a New Ecological Niche
- Appendix: Addressing the Historical and Manuscript Challenges of Julian of Norwich: A Case for My Methodological Approach
- Bibliography
- Index