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Becoming society again : Reimagining new social contracts through Scandinavian creation theology

Gerle, Elisabeth LU (2021) In Dialog 60(2). p.167-176
Abstract

This article focuses on bodily care as the basis of economy. Drawing on Luther and Scandinavian Creation Theology, with an emphasis on shared situatedness and society, I discuss contemporary threats to welfare states. Conservative arguments in favor of family and small communities, combined with charity, provide a cultural/religious alibi for a global “neoliberalism,” where citizens are replaced by customers, and where power and resources from professions are transferred to controllers, due to the logic of NPM. In a critical discussion with Hannah Arendt, I argue that we need a politics that reinforce and develop new social contracts, national as well as international, based on an inclusive demos. A pre-political Lutheran ethos can give... (More)

This article focuses on bodily care as the basis of economy. Drawing on Luther and Scandinavian Creation Theology, with an emphasis on shared situatedness and society, I discuss contemporary threats to welfare states. Conservative arguments in favor of family and small communities, combined with charity, provide a cultural/religious alibi for a global “neoliberalism,” where citizens are replaced by customers, and where power and resources from professions are transferred to controllers, due to the logic of NPM. In a critical discussion with Hannah Arendt, I argue that we need a politics that reinforce and develop new social contracts, national as well as international, based on an inclusive demos. A pre-political Lutheran ethos can give inspiration to act for the common good, transcending any homogenous ethnos. The local and national are crucial for sustaining body and mind. However, this is increasingly combined with global and planetary entanglements. Interdependency reveals itself as planetary, where disappearing rain forests, melting icebergs, and the ongoing extinction of species are threats to our shared future. Therefore, rather than emphasizing the individual as a consumer on a global market with neutral administrators administering control and obedience, new kinds of contracts are needed. Core values of the pre-political, such as care for bodily life and minds, may, in collaboration with national and international political assemblies, develop a planetary consciousness able to act for the common good, for a global demos with structures of solidarity.

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Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
"neoliberalism", bodies, defending welfare states, New Public Management, planet, Scandinavian Creation Theology, Social justice
in
Dialog
volume
60
issue
2
pages
167 - 176
publisher
Wiley-Blackwell
external identifiers
  • scopus:85107376470
ISSN
0012-2033
DOI
10.1111/dial.12675
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
8b8cc762-8d42-4f44-bafa-5654a4b7bf15
date added to LUP
2021-06-24 14:41:05
date last changed
2022-04-27 02:36:31
@article{8b8cc762-8d42-4f44-bafa-5654a4b7bf15,
  abstract     = {{<p>This article focuses on bodily care as the basis of economy. Drawing on Luther and Scandinavian Creation Theology, with an emphasis on shared situatedness and society, I discuss contemporary threats to welfare states. Conservative arguments in favor of family and small communities, combined with charity, provide a cultural/religious alibi for a global “neoliberalism,” where citizens are replaced by customers, and where power and resources from professions are transferred to controllers, due to the logic of NPM. In a critical discussion with Hannah Arendt, I argue that we need a politics that reinforce and develop new social contracts, national as well as international, based on an inclusive demos. A pre-political Lutheran ethos can give inspiration to act for the common good, transcending any homogenous ethnos. The local and national are crucial for sustaining body and mind. However, this is increasingly combined with global and planetary entanglements. Interdependency reveals itself as planetary, where disappearing rain forests, melting icebergs, and the ongoing extinction of species are threats to our shared future. Therefore, rather than emphasizing the individual as a consumer on a global market with neutral administrators administering control and obedience, new kinds of contracts are needed. Core values of the pre-political, such as care for bodily life and minds, may, in collaboration with national and international political assemblies, develop a planetary consciousness able to act for the common good, for a global demos with structures of solidarity.</p>}},
  author       = {{Gerle, Elisabeth}},
  issn         = {{0012-2033}},
  keywords     = {{"neoliberalism"; bodies; defending welfare states; New Public Management; planet; Scandinavian Creation Theology; Social justice}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{2}},
  pages        = {{167--176}},
  publisher    = {{Wiley-Blackwell}},
  series       = {{Dialog}},
  title        = {{Becoming society again : Reimagining new social contracts through Scandinavian creation theology}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/dial.12675}},
  doi          = {{10.1111/dial.12675}},
  volume       = {{60}},
  year         = {{2021}},
}