Radical Orthodoxy
@article{Grumett2011RadicalO, title={Radical Orthodoxy}, author={David Grumett}, journal={The Expository Times}, year={2011}, volume={122}, pages={261 - 270} }
The newest theological direction to be covered in this series, Radical Orthodoxy was launched in 1999 by Cambridge theologians John Milbank, Catherine Pickstock and Graham Ward. It sought to contest secular culture and the sidelining of theology from academic and public discourse by demonstrating the insufficiency of any account of reality that excluded religion or theology. Key themes have included culture, participation, gift, liturgy, erotic desire and the body.
2 Citations
"Revolution in Religious Language": The Relevance of Julia Kristeva's Theory of 'Signifiance' for Theology
- Art
- 2017
This dissertation applies Julia Kristeva’ theory of revolution in the practice of signifiance to religious discourse. In particular, it argues that the salient features of signifiance are present and…
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Items marked * provide an accessible introduction
Radical Orthodoxy: A Critical Introduction
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