Un/familiar Theology

Reconceiving Sex, Reproduction and Generativity

Dr Susannah Cornwall author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Published:27th Dec '18

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Un/familiar Theology cover

A constructive theological rereading of marriage, sex, family and parenthood, acknowledging their shifting nature, and suggesting, through engagement with queer theological and theoretical material, that generativity and reproduction should be understood as more than biological.

Through engagement with theologies of adoption, pro-natalism, marriage, and queer theology, Susannah Cornwall figures developments in models of marriage and family not as distortions of or divergences from the divinely-ordained blueprint, but as developments already of a piece with these institution’s being. Much Christian theological discussion of family, sex and marriage seems to claim that they are (or should be) unchanging and immaculate; that to celebrate their shifting and developing natures is to reject them as good gifts of God. However models of marriage, family, parenting and reproduction have changed and are still, in some cases radically, changing. These changes are not all a raging tide to be turned back, but in continuity with goods deeply embedded in the tradition. Alternative forms of marriage and family stand as signs of the hope of the possibility of change. Changed institutions, such as same-sex marriage, are new beginnings with the potential to be fruitful and generative in their own right. In them, humans create new imaginaries which more fully acknowledge the interactive nature of our relationships with the world and the divine.

Cornwall's prolific writing is always fresh and innovative, weaving together classical and contemporary theology with contemporary thought and social practice. Her latest book does not disappoint. Her approach to marriage, same-sex families, adoption, even polyamory (and more) is a tour de force, achieving in her writing what she advocates for Christian traditions more generally - that they are dynamic; and that they must negotiate continuity with change, and identity with difference. Her analysis of 'generativity', whether in 'un/familiar' family forms, or within the theological tradition as it generates new thinking, is timely and convincing, and will also generate much appreciation among her readers. * Adrian Thatcher, University of Exeter, UK *

ISBN: 9780567685841

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 308g

224 pages