From body to body: A post‐gender politics for the cosmic homo1 |
| |
Authors: | Else Marie Wiberg Pedersen |
| |
Affiliation: | Theology, Aarhus University, Denmark |
| |
Abstract: | This article engages in establishing some common ground, some human and humane politics for the global Luther, in contradistinction to the focus in much recent scholarship on difference/s as an almost hegemonic way of understanding human life. The aim is to move beyond feminist, poststructuralist, and postcolonial theories to a post‐gender politics by employing Judith Butler's concepts of performativity and “abject” bodies. Homo, the human being, will be the hermeneutical key for examining Luther's understanding of God's creation and incarnation as well as of baptism, the Lord's Supper, and the church. The aim is that of searching out Luther's differing performances of body, from the carnal body of the incarnate Christ and the human body to the spiritual body of church and community, and how these matter, materialize and intersect in the body of Christ as one body/homo. |
| |
Keywords: | body cosmic homo Judith Butler Martin Luther post‐gender |
|
|