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Remaking Humanity

Autor Adam Beyt Editat de Frederiek Depoortere, Stephan van Erp, O P
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 19 mar 2026
Drawing upon Edward Schillebeeckx's theology and Judith Butler's philosophy, Adam Beyt uses the framework of nonviolent hope to construct a Catholic political theology responding to dehumanizing violence. Dehumanizing violence names words, institutions, or acts violating the inherent dignity of being made in the image and likeness of God. Theology can participate in dehumanizing violence by claiming an uninterrogated universality that marginalizes bodies due to their perceived differences such as gender, race, sexuality, or ability.

The book's constructive project integrates Schillebeeckx's and Butler's thought with queer theory and phenomenology to model embodiment as an "enfleshing dynamism" between bodies and signification. The text then posits Catholic discipleship as incarnating hope by defending the humanum, the new humanity announced through God's Reign. Combining reflections from Schillebeeckx and Butler, this hope centers discipleship as nonviolent world building. Concluding with a sustained reflection with the writings of Franz Fanon and Walter Benjamin, the final chapter sketches a Catholic solidaristic response to contemporary struggles against the necropolitics of colonizing and state violence through assemblies of hope.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780567714770
ISBN-10: 0567714772
Pagini: 256
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: BLOOMSBURY ACADEMIC
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom

Cuprins

Introduction

Chapter One
AN UNFULFILLED PROMISE: Catholic Theological Anthropology and Harmful Discipleship

Chapter Two
THE INCARNATED SELF: Finitude, Embodied Experience, and Mediated Immediacy

Chapter Three
THE BODY AS AN ENFLESHED DYNAMISM: Schillebeeckx's Sacramental Theology and the Chiasm of Merleau-Ponty

Chapter Four
ANTHROPOLOGICAL APOPHASIS: Butler and the Philosophy of the "Human"

Chapter Five
INCARNATING HOPE: Schillebeeckx's Mystical-Political Discipleship

Chapter Six
BUTLER AND NONVIOLENT HOPE

Chapter Seven
THE FORCE OF HOPE: Freedom from Necropolitics

Conclusion

Bibliography
Index

Recenzii

Adam Beyt's Remaking Humanity expresses the ontological vulnerability of embodied existence in a sacramental mode. This is both a provocative and constructive proposal for a theology that takes the experience of having and being a body seriously-including all of the dynamism, instability, and vulnerability that this entails. With the work of Edward Schillebeeckx as a starting point, Beyt builds from thinkers like Bulter, Merleau-Ponty, and Mbembe in pursuit of a mystical political practice involving the whole person. This book is a Thomistically grounded work of political theology that is steeped in the sacramental imagination, allowing it to run through doors pushed open by Schillebeeckx and earlier generations of scholars. Beyt imagines 'incarnating hope' in a way that expands the borders of the Rule of God beyond polarized binaries, exclusions, and inherited structures of violence.
Beyt's Remaking Humanity prompts a serious rethinking of any Catholic theological anthropology by juxtaposing a violence latent at the heart of a 'theology of the body' with a phenomenology of embodiment that strives to recognize the politics of marginalization always at work in theological discourses. By reading the Incarnation with Judith Butler and locating 'assemblies of hope' with Fanon and Mbembe, Beyt presents us with a nothing less than a detailed roadmap for an experience of grace that resonates deeply with the complex and multifaceted bodies that we actually inhabit in our everyday lives.