01712nam a2200301 a 450000500170000000800200001702000180003704100080005508200150006308200130007810000250009110000110011624500330012724500340016024500370019426000110023126000280024226000090027030000110027930000280029030000100031849000340032852008940036265000290125665000290128565000300131485600660134420260119071410.02024-06-11 13:15:00 a9780198752479 aeng a230.044092 bG673-T59 aGorringe, Timothy J. eAuthor aKarl Barth: Against Hegemony bChristian Theology in Context cTimothy J. Gorringe, Graham Ward aU.S.A. bOxford University Press c1999 a313tr. bpaperback, illustration c22 cm aChristian Theology in Context aA knowing of Barth's work would reveal that whilst including the word ‘against’ in the title entails something contrary and in spite of what is alleged by several critics, Barth was not to be perceived as an ‘eternal Nay sayer’. Barth was even resolute regarding his views on how ‘No’ existed only because of the existence of ‘Yes’. While the title accounts for only one dimension of Barth's work, it does not consider one aspect in which all stages of his theology are linked. On the whole, this books aims to validate the claim that entails how his work is distinguished as a contextual theology through clarifying the notion of ‘hegemony’. Barth's Gramsci attempted to discuss hegemony in Prison Notebooks as a ‘conception of the world that is implicitly manifest in art, in law, in economic activity and in all manifestations of individual and collective life’. aBarth, Karl -- 1886-1968 aChristianity -- Theology aChristianity and politics4 uhttps://data.thuviencodoc.org/books/14726/22.jpgyCover Image