43 research outputs found
Between the Prose of Justice and the Poetics of Love? Reading RicĆur on Mutual Recognition in the Light of Harmful Strategies of âOtheringâ
Against the backdrop of the challenges posed by xenophobia and other social phenomena that operated with harmful strategies of âothering,â this article considers the promise that the notion of âmutual recognitionâ as exemplified in the later work of Paul RicĆur holds for discourse on these matters. Can the hermeneutical and mediating approach of RicĆur provide an adequate framework in order to respond to these radical challenges? In light of this question, this article discusses and ultimately affirms RicĆurâs view that places mutual recognition between what he calls the prose of justice and the poetics of agĂĄpÄ. In addition this article draws attention to the value of symbolic gestures and an ethic of linguistic hospitality to give further texture to the plea for mutual recognition amidst experience of exclusion, conflict and violence.Face aux dĂ©fis de la xĂ©nophobie et des autres phĂ©nomĂšnes sociaux liĂ©s aux stratĂ©gies nuisibles âdâaltĂ©risation,â cet article rĂ©flĂ©chit Ă la promesse que reprĂ©sente la notion de âreconnaissance mutuelleâ telle quâelle se trouve dĂ©finie dans les derniers travaux de Paul RicĆur. Dans quelle mesure lâapproche hermĂ©neutique de RicĆur et son travail de mĂ©diation sont-ils susceptibles de rĂ©pondre Ă ces dĂ©fis radicaux? En prenant cette question comme fil conducteur, cet article discute et reprend finalement Ă son compte la thĂšse de RicĆur selon laquelle la reconnaissance mutuelle se situe entre ce quâil appelle la âproseâ de la justice et la âpoĂ©sieâ de lâagapĂš. Lâauteur attire en outre l'attention sur la valeur des gestes symboliques et de lâhospitalitĂ© ethnique et linguistique susceptibles de donner plus de consistance Ă lâappel pour la reconnaissance mutuelle au sein de cette expĂ©rience dâexclusion, de conflit et de violence
'Memory, history, and justice : in search of conceptual clarity'
Publication of this article was funded by the Stellenbosch University Open Access Fund.The original publication is available at http://ngtt.journals.ac.za/pubHow should we reconfigure the relationship between memory and history as two distinguishable yet interconnected epistemological routes to knowing the past? This article seeks some conceptual clarity on the intricate and complex interrelation between memory and history, also in conversation with some questions that arise from contexts associated with historical injustice. With this purpose in mind, the article engages especially the later work of the French philosopher Paul Ricoeur. Ricoeurâs response to the memory-history problem is not to view memory and history as adversaries, but to view them as conjoined and complementary as we grapple with the past and the temporality of our own lives. In light of this affirmation of the dialectical relationship between memory and history, the article further emphasises some aspects that are important to consider in the search for a responsible historical hermeneutic.Stellenbosch UniversityPublishers' versio
Prophetic witness in weakness
This article addresses the possible link between prophetic witness and weakness (one can also speak of vulnerability), and expands on reasons why this connection holds much promise for a theological engagement with the question regarding the prophetic role of Christians and churches in the public sphere in South Africa today. With this in mind, the various sections underscore the need for a form of prophetic witness that emphasises respectively prophetic solidarity, prophetic imagination and prophetic performativity. In the process, the article puts forward three statements or theses as invitation for further reflection and conversation, drawing on, among others, the work of Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Giorgio Agamben, Emmanuel Katongole and Judith Butler
Memory, embodiment, ethics : in conversation with Wentzel van Huyssteenâs work on theological anthropology
CITATION: Vosloo, R. 2021. Memory, embodiment, ethics : in conversation with Wentzel van Huyssteenâs work on theological anthropology. Verbum et Ecclesia, 42(2):a2383, doi:10.4102/ve.v42i2.2383.The original publication is available at https://verbumetecclesia.org.zaThis article focuses on Wentzel van Huyssteenâs work on theological anthropology, attending especially to his emphasis on the temporal and narrative dimension of personal identity. In this regard, Van Huyssteen draws on the thought of Paul Ricoeur, including his view that memory is the gateway to the self. With this in mind, the first part of the article highlights some key features of Van Huyssteenâs engagement the last decade or two with the question what it means to be human, namely the affirmation of interdisciplinarity, embodiment and vulnerability. The argument is put forward that Van Huyssteenâs work invites and displays the need to uphold the interconnections between embodiment, memory, vulnerability, imagination and empathy. It is furthermore claimed that his constructive proposals âin search of selfâ should be seen as inextricably connected with its crucial ethical and theological motivation and contours.
Intradisciplinary and/or interdisciplinary implications: This article focuses on the South African theologian Wentzel van Huyssteenâs work on theological anthropology. He is internationally renowned, and this article discusses key features of his views and brings it into conversation with the work of the philosopher Paul Ricoeur and perspectives from memory studies. As such, it presents a novel engagement that can enrich systematic theological discourse.https://verbumetecclesia.org.za/index.php/VE/article/view/2383Publisher's versio
Archiving otherwise : some remarks on memory and historical responsibility
Peer reviewedThis essay seeks to contribute to the ongoing discussion
on memory, historiography and archiving by engaging
Jacques Derridaâs influential book Archive fever: A
Freudian impression. The first part of the essay deals with
Derridaâs reflections on the word âarchiveâ, as well as his
discussion of the possibility of the destruction of the
archive through the death drive and his argument about
the archive and the openness towards the future. The rest
of the essay aims, in conversation with Derrida, at
reconfiguring archival passion as a passion for the past, a
passion for justice and a passion for the future.Church History Society of Southern Afric
Calvin, the Academy of Geneva and 150 years of theology at Stellenbosch : historical-theological contributions to the conversation on theological education
Peer reviewedThe concurrent celebrations of the 500th anniversary of
Calvinâs birth, the 450th anniversary of the opening of the
Genevan Academy and 150 years of theology at Stellenbosch
invite reflection on theological education. With this in mind,
this article revisits some aspects of the founding and early
years of the Genevan Academy. It will be shown how, in the
first instance, the architects of the Genevan Academy did not
view theology as isolated from other sources of wisdom;
secondly, that the commitment to train ministers for the
Reformed churches formed part of a larger vision to transform
society; and thirdly, that the Genevan Academy was not
immune to tensions inherent in early modern Reformed higher
education. Against the backdrop of these three brief observations,
and in view of the reception of Calvin and Calvinism at
Stellenbosch, the rest of the article offers some remarks on the
challenges facing theological education in contexts such as the
Faculty of Theology at Stellenbosch. The article suggests that
some notes on âthe Reformed habit of mindâ (Gerrish) may be
valuable in navigating the possible tensions between confessional
identity and ecumenism, between academic and ecclesiastical
theology.Research Institute for Theology and Religio
The Dutch Reformed Church, Beyers Naude and the ghost of Cottesloe
Peer reviewedThis article revisits the important and controversial Cottesloe Church Consultation that
was held from 7 to 14 December 1960 in South Africa under the auspices of the World
Council of Churches. It focuses mainly on events that occurred in the Dutch Reformed
Church following the Cottesloe Consultation. Special attention is given to the role of
Beyers Naudé by drawing on some of his newspaper articles, speeches and sermons
during this time (including some unpublished material). Given this focus, the article
describes Cottesloe as a vital historical marker that points to some unfinished business
for the Dutch Reformed Church on an ecclesial, ecumenical and theological level. It
argues that the general response of the Dutch Reformed Church to the Cottesloe
Consultation led to harmful ecumenical isolation and hampered the church from living
out its prophetic calling vis-Ă -vis the state.Research Institute for Theology and Religio
Reconfigurating ecclesial identity : in conversation with Paul Ricoeur
Peer reviewedThe complex interrelated histories of the family of churches within
the Dutch Reformed Church pose serious historiographical
questions. At the heart lies the methodological question of the
representation of the past. This question is also central to Paul
Ricoeurâs monumental work La mĂ©moire, lâhistoire, lâoubli
(translated in 2004 as Memory, history, forgetting). After giving a
broad outline of Ricoeurâs overall argument in this book, the main
body of this article attends to Ricoeurâs discussion of the uses and
abuses of memory, as well as his theory of the three phases of the
historical operation. The last section of the article draws in part on
Ricoeurâs work and gives a brief outline of four trajectories that
seek to contribute to the discussion regarding an adequate
methodology for doing church history in Southern Africa today.Research Institute for Theology and Religio
The state of exception and religious freedom : revisiting the church-state confrontation, correspondence and statements of 1988
This article revisits the documentation related to the
church-state confrontation of 1988 with the aim of showing
how it reflects different views on the prophetic role of the
church in society, as well as different presuppositions
regarding freedom of faith and worship. After a discussion
of the polemical 1988 correspondence between church
leaders and the State President, the second part of the
article attends to the thought of the Italian philosopher
Giorgio Agamben, and more specifically to his provocative
discussion of the notions of âhomo sacerâ and âstate of
exceptionâ. The last part of the article brings aspects of
Agambenâs thought into conversation with the church-state
correspondence of 1988 in order to argue for an
understanding of freedom of religion that encompasses
the freedom of the church to speak prophetically against
any attempt by the state to normalise a state of exception
that threatens vulnerable life.Research Institute for Theology and Religio