Resurrection as Insurrection: Potential Space and the Subversion of Political Totalities |
| |
Authors: | Ryan LaMothe |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. Pastoral Care and Counseling, Saint Meinrad Seminary and School of Theology, 200 Hill Dr., St. Meinrad, IN, 47577, USA
|
| |
Abstract: | In this article, I depict the shared belief in resurrection as subversive vis-à-vis political totalities. More particularly, I argue that the idea of resurrection as insurrection emerges against the background of the political realities of the Roman Empire and its diverse tools for controlling people through public spectacles of terror that heighten fear, helplessness, and indifference, thwarting motivations for resistance and insurrection. From this context, resurrection reveals a present-future possibility of an embodied care, hope, and freedom in spite of and not subject to principalities that aim to subjugate bodies and minds. Given this idea of resurrection, I use an emended version of Winnicott’s (1953, 1967, 1971) concept of potential space and Arendt’s (1958) space of appearances to portray the interpersonal and psychosocial dynamics that make it possible for people to retain care, hope, and freedom in resisting and subverting the political totalities that undermine each. |
| |
Keywords: | |
本文献已被 SpringerLink 等数据库收录! |
|