Christ and CultureISBN: 978-1-4051-2141-5
Paperback
280 pages
November 2005, Wiley-Blackwell
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Graham Ward has always written insightful and arresting
theology, but in this book he exposits scripture, retrieves
tradition and interrogates culture with a yet more brilliant and
surer touch than ever before. His concern is with the cultural
mediation of the Mediator, Jesus Christ, who, in the endless
displacements of his body, is not so much an identity to be known
as an operation, a movement, in which to participate. This book is
about the ‘first born’ of creation, the one by, for and
in whom we live, the ‘culture’ by which we are given to
be. Ward’s transcorporeal Christology challenges our secular
certainties and finds for us the promise of the transcendent in the
textual—and indeed sexual—negotiations of our always
encultured bodies. This is wonderfully mesmeric, bravura theology.
Gerard Loughlin, University of Durham
"New book attempts to break out of the Christian insularity to
produce a genuinely public theology of significant interest to
postmodern philosophers and social theorists."
Modern Theology