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Theorizing Modernities

Constructing responsive theory to understand and evaluate the dynamics of modernity.

Featured in Theorizing Modernities

  • Scientific Literacy for Madrasa Graduates: A Project for Religious Renewal at the University of Notre Dame

    The goal of Madrasa Discourses is to transform the intellectual culture within madrasa scholarship by bringing it into conversation with contemporary intellectu...


  • Sustainable Resources: Reimagining Our Relationship with the Earth

    In the age of the anthropocene—climate change brought about by human actions—religious traditions can offer vital resources for reimagining a sustainable relati...


  • Border-Crossers: Interrogating Boundaries through Bodies

    What we can infer from this panel is that the political, racial, and religious markers which compose borders are also etched and negotiated on the bodies of the...


  • The Price of (non) Whiteness

    Are American Jews willing to forfeit some of that privilege, whatever that might mean, as a gesture to those whose who cannot “pass” into the space of whiteness...


  • Introduction to Policing Analogies

    The interrogation of normative representation and the creation of multi-racial and multi-gendered spaces are inadvertently rendered invisible and inaudible with...


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Theorizing Modernities Articles

The Dangerous Hope of Visceral Lament: A Response to Lynch, Ocobock, Cavanaugh and Maluleke

Series: Born from Lament
Emmanuel Katongole
August 31, 2017August 31, 2017

What the portraits of Born from Lament reveal is a theology and through that theology the possibility of a non-violent politics of solidarity and compassion born out of the deep experience of suffering in the world.

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Something Rotten in the State of Denmark: Katongole on Africa’s Gifts for the West

Series: Born from Lament
William Cavanaugh
August 18, 2017August 8, 2017

The choice for Katongole is not simply the choice between Africa and the West. The cure for Africa’s problems does indeed need to come from outside of Africa, but not from a Western state. It needs to come from God.

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The “Dark Continent” is Dead

Series: Born from Lament
Paul Ocobock
August 15, 2017August 15, 2017

After reading Born from Lament, I want to shout from the mountaintop that the “Dark Continent is dead!” Or at least the awful way we in the West describe Africa is dead.

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Between ‘Descriptive Haste’ and ‘Prescriptive Haste’

Series: Born from Lament
Tinyiko Maluleke
August 8, 2017August 15, 2017

The central thesis of Emmanuel Katongole’s Born from Lament: The Theology and Politics of Hope in Africa is that lament…

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The Many Faces of Lament

Series: Born from Lament
Cecelia Lynch
August 3, 2017August 4, 2017

How do Christians who have experienced the indescribable love of God in their suffering, and from it draw out unfathomable hope, relate to those who also practice lament and seek hope, but are not Christian?

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The Visceral Politics of Lament: A CM Symposium on “Born from Lament”

Series: Born from Lament
Kyle Lambelet
August 1, 2017October 4, 2018

In his new book Born from Lament: The Theology and Politics of Hope in Africa, Emmanuel Katongole explores a constellation of manifestations of politics in a visceral register by analyzing the theology and politics of lament in East Africa.

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Nourishing Hospitality: Jolyon Mitchell Interviews Mona Siddiqui

Series: Hospitality and Faith
Jolyon Mitchell and Mona Siddiqui
May 26, 2017August 2, 2017

Generosity wasn’t just the act of giving; it’s the most noble thing that you could do. Because in the harsh desert environment, if you weren’t generous to your guests or to the stranger, the stranger would die.

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Hospitality and Empire

Series: Hospitality and Faith
Perin Gürel
May 26, 2017October 4, 2018

Except this time, within this new, muscular, postcolonial hospitality, the erstwhile settler gets to play gracious host.

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Expanding the Conversation on Hospitality in Islam

Series: Hospitality and Faith
Martin Nguyen
May 26, 2017September 13, 2017

The interview “Nourishing Hospitality,” conducted by Jolyon Mitchell with author and scholar Mona Siddiqui, is not only a useful introduction…

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Action as Prayer: Lessons from Oceti Sakowin

Series: Prayer and Action
Jonathan Brenneman
April 3, 2017

The prayer practices at Oceti Sakowin camp offered a holistic and positive relationship between prayer and action, a relationship not often found between prayer and action within Christianity.

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