Prof. Gerard Loughlin, Department of Theology and Religion, University of Durham.
Abstract:
In this paper I read Judith Butler against Oliver O’Donovan on transgendered bodies. I attempt to show that in a certain sense she is a better theologian than he, because she does not seek to stabilize the movement of bodies and their desires against what they are called to be. Butler is open to a becoming that O’Donovan forecloses, and forecloses in the name of a contingent and counter-factual imagining of nature that occludes the one order theology does disclose: the movement of all being toward its end—and, in particular, the movement of human being toward God, the becoming other that theology names theosis.
Please contact Richard Bell for more information: Atzrhb@exmail.nottingham.ac.uk
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University of NottinghamUniversity Park Nottingham, NG7 2RD
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