This workbook provides a conceptual and paradigmic tool that includes essays as well as question and concept development. It should be of use to those running diversity and research programmes or teaching in this area.
Based on the premise that literature is important, this study explores the intersection of tragedy with philosophy and psychoanalysis. It examines the tension between philosophy and literature, discusses the teaching of tragedy, and discusses that teaching in the works of Lacan, Marcel and Claudel.
This work is a two-division study of twentieth century philosophies of history in Europe. Fields engaged in the study are transcendental philosophy, speculative metaphysics, theology, historiographical theory, and intellectual history. The main question concerns the historical finitude of History and its temporal horizon. The work explores the unsolved consequences of G.W.F. Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit (1807) and Martin Heidegger's Being a...
Based on the premise that literature is important, this study explores the intersection of tragedy with philosophy and psychoanalysis. It examines the tension between philosophy and literature, discusses the teaching of tragedy, and discusses that teaching in the works of Lacan, Marcel and Claudel.
This important study brings to the attention of Christian and Jewish scholars long-neglected historical background regarding the timetable and events of Passion Week.
A revolutionary way of theologising has developed in the Roman Catholic Church in Latin America. Uruguayan Jesuit, Juan Luis Secundo has contributed to the formation of a liberating theology through his books and articles. This monograph delves into the Christological aspects of his work.
A detailed and lively history of race prejudice and anti-foreign sentiment in California during the gold rush, between 1849 and 1855. Employing many original sources, particularly frontier newspapers of the period, Hill depicts the treatment not only of the Chinese, Mexicans, and Chilenos but also of the French, Germans, and Pacific Islanders by the Americans who swarmed West in search of gold.
This study of Juan de la Cruz examines the transformative power of love in Juan's work and the substructure of classical optimism and renewal, implicit in his creative work.