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The handbook offers interreligious and multicultural perspectives on women's studies in religion alongside specific contextualized gender-biased justice challenges. Contributors address 25 current and trending themes from their diverse backgrounds. The handbook is practical, contemporary, and relevant as it moves theory to practical application.
List of contents
Acknowledgments
Foreword by Rabia Harris, Community of Living Traditions
Editor's Introduction by Helen T. Boursier, College of St. Scholastica
SECTION ONE . A FIRMLY FLUID FOUNDATION FOR WOMEN'S STUDIES IN RELIGION
1 A Work in Progress: Feminist Scholarship Shaping God's Image-Then and Now
by Jacqueline J. Lewis, Middle Collegiate Church, New York2 The Inclusive Language of God: Why It Matters for Women's Studies in Religion
by Yudit Kornberg Greenberg, Rollins Colleg3
Doing Women's Studies in Religion-A Methodology Primer for Moving from the Classroom into Real Life
by Natalie Kertes Weaver, Ursuline College4 Women's Creative Research Methodologies on the Peripheries and at the Border: Latina Women's Restorative Interventions through Art and Activism
by Rebecca M. Berru-Davis, St. Catherine University, St. Paul, MinnesotaSECTION TWO . ETHICAL CONNECTIONS
5 Where Ecofeminism Meets Religions: Contributions and Challenges
by Heather Eaton, Saint Paul University in Ottawa, Canada6 Reconfiguring Economic Sustainability: A Feminist Ethic for Liberty and Justice for All
by Sharon D. Welch, Meadville Lombard Theological School(Unitarian Universalist)7 Feminist Ethics and the Harms of Credibility Excess
by Candace Jordan, Princeton University, PhD candidate8 Do Not Pass Me By: A Womanist Reprise and Response to Health Care's Cultural Dismissal and Erasure of Black Women's Pain
by Anjeanette M.Allen, Chicago Theological Seminary, PhD StudentSECTION THREE . RELIGIOUS DIVERSITY AND WOMEN'S STUDIES IN RELIGION
9 Constructing Wicca as "Women's Religion": A By-Product of Feminist Religious Scholarship
by Michelle Mueller, Santa Clara University10 For All Sentient Beings: The Question of Gender in Tibetan and Himalayan Buddhist Communities
by Amy Holmes-Tagchungdarpa, Occidental College11 Introducing Asian Transpacific American Feminist Theology
by Keun-Joo Christine Pae, Denison University12 "I Am the One Who Will Change the Direction of the World": A Female Guru's Response to Sexual Inequality and Violence in Hinduism
by Antoinette E.DeNapoli, Texas Christian University13 Women in the Jewish Tradition: A Brief Overview of Jewish Feminism in the Last 50 Years
by Yudit Kornberg Greenberg, Rollins College14 Muslimah Theology and Praxis
by Zayn Kassam, Pomona College15 Homiletical Changes and Preaching Leadership of Women in the Christian Church
by HyeRan Kim-Cragg, Emmanuel College, University of TorontoSECTION FOUR . CHALLENGING AND CHANGING SYSTEMIC GENDER INJUSTICE
16 What's Religion Got to Do with Sexual Violence and the #MeToo Movement?
by Marie M. Fortune, FaithTrust Institute17 Femicide in Global Perspective: A Feminist Critique
by Helen T. Boursier, College of St. Scholastica18 Call to Accountability: Women's Studies in Religion Critiques State Culpability to Feminicide through Border Controls and Exclusion from Asylum
by Helen T. Boursier, College of St. Scholastica19 Doctrine of Discovery: A Mohawk Feminist Response to Colonial Dominion and Violations to Indigenous Lands and Women
by Dawn Martin-Hill,McMaster University20 Women's Religio-Political Witness for Love and Justice
by Rosemary P. Carbine, Whittier CollegeSECTION FIVE . FUTURE MOVEMENT-THE BECOM
ING OF WOMEN'S STUDIES IN RELIGION
21 Feminism, Religion, and the Digital World
by Gina Messina, Ursuline College22 Documenting, Changing, and Reimagining Women's Mosque Spaces Online
by Krista Melanie Riley, Vanier College, Montreal, Quebec, Canada23 Minoritized Sexual Identities and the Theo-Politics of Democracy
by Ludger Viefhues-Bailey, LeMoyne College24 Spiritual Homelessness and Homemaking: A Nomadic Spirituality for Survivors of Childhood Violence
by Denise Starkey, College of St. Scholastica25 Hope Now
by Cynthia L. Rigby, Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary26 Resources for Clarification, Education, and Action
Index
About the Contributors
About the author
Helen T. Boursier is a professor of theology at College of St. Mary and Austin Graduate School of Theology. She is a founding member of Feminist Theology in Religion, an academic research group who publish the Journal of Theological Feminist Research. She has a PhD in Theology and a PhD of Divinity and is an ordained priest
.