Sentences with phrase «emergence of liberation»

She says nothing about the precipitous decline of Niebuhr's influence after the emergence of liberation theology.
The second stream of theological reflection is the explosive emergence of liberation theology, whether of class (the poor).

Not exact matches

It is precisely the emergence of gay liberation as a social movement determined to restructure society's laws and mores that has made homosexuality a subject of such intense controversy in our time.
The liberation from external restraint and the emergence of «the blessed unison of the whole American harpsichord, as now set to the tune of liberty,» as it was described in 1775, must indeed have inspired the millenial expectations that were never very far below the surface in colonial America.32
But if his thought is to offer any kind of basis for liberation theology, a more flexible interpretation will be needed in which the emergence of the state will take place in each society in its own tune.
An exploration of the emergence of mujerista theology — which brings together elements of feminist theology, Latin American liberation theology and cultural theology.
The emergence of theologies of liberation — whether black, feminist or Latin American — is probably the most significant theological development of recent years.
In 1978 he wrote about Christ Without Myth: «The newer theological developments of the past decade, especially the emergence of the various theologians of liberation, compelled the conclusion that the most urgent theological problem today, at any rate for the vast number of persons who still do not share in the benefits of modernity, is a problem more of action and justice than of belief and truth.
The rapid emergence of civil society organizations and civic activist groups was welcomed as indicative of the «liberation» process — gone are the days of the Qaddafi Foundation and its monopoly of civil society — and today Libya boasts a diverse civil society and civic activist space (See El Taraboulsi and Salah, 2013).
Mr Ibrahim Jimoh, also said that the emergence of Bello had brought liberation to the «marginalised» tribes in the state.
From Bourgeois's formative struggle with the «father figures» of surrealism, including Andre Breton and Marcel Duchamp, to her galvanizing role in the feminist art movement of the 1970s, to her subsequent emergence as a leading voice in postmodernism, this book explores the artist's responses to war, dislocation, and motherhood, to the predicament of the «woman artist» and the politics of sexual and social liberation, as a dialogue with psychoanalysis.
Tansaekhwa developed in the wake of Korea's emergence as global power following the country's liberation from Japanese rule and the aftermath of the Korean War.
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