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With over 200 illustrations of iconic works as well as preparatory studies and historic photographs, this book offers fresh insight into Koons’s polarizing and influential career.
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The movement of process theology is brought into creative interaction with political theology in this exciting new work by distinguished author John B. Cobb Jr. Confronted with the critical problems facing the global environment, the author seeks to overcome the abstractness that has kept process thought from achieving practical influence. Cobb reviews contemporary political theology in the works of major European theologians, Johann Baptist Metz, Jürgen Moltmann, and Dorothee Sölle, then surveys the movement in recent German theology. He examines the challenge of political theology in the tradition of the Chicago school and advocates broadening the horizons of political theology into the formulation of an ecological, rather than a sociological, theology. Process Theology as Political Theology responds to the challenge of providing a theological base for the Christian activist. Pastors, seminarians, and students will find it to be a stimulating evolutionary work, derived from the author’s concern for the planet earth.
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Im Zuge der Tertiarisierung wurde die gesamte Ausbildung von Lehrpersonen in der Schweiz an der Hochschule verortet. Die Beiträge in diesem Buch untersuchen, wie sich die Bildung von Lehrerinnen und Lehrern hierdurch verändert hat. Sie diskutieren, welche Herausforderungen sich aktuell – nicht nur in der Schweiz – für die Bildung von Lehrpersonen und in der schulischen Praxis stellen. Ferner beleuchten sie das Verhältnis von Lehrpersonenbildung, Kompetenzentwicklung und Berufspraxis sowie den Zusammenhang von Erziehung und Gesellschaft. Damit bringen sie verschiedene wichtige Aspekte zur Bildung von Lehrerinnen und Lehrern in die aktuelle Diskussion ein.
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Liberation and political theologies have emerged powerfully in recent years, interrupting the way in which First World Christians both experience and understand their faith. Through an analysis of the cultural and ecclesial contexts of these theological movements, as well as a critical examination of four of their principal exponents--Gustavo Gutierrez, Johann Baptist Metz, Jose Miguez Bonino, and Jurgen Moltmann--the author demonstrates that political and liberation theologies represent a new model of theology, one that proffers a vision of Christian witness as a praxis of solidarity with suffering persons.