Theology, Phenomenology and the Retrieval of Experience : A Homage to Peter Kemp
(2021) In Eco-Ethica 9 (2020). p.17-34- Abstract
- Inspired by the contemporary Danish philosopher Dorthe Jørgensen, this article engages in a re-reading of Peter Kemp’s 1973 dissertation Théorie de l’engagement with a view to exploring its persisting theological value. After briefly revisiting its main argument, I turn in the following section to a discussion of its way of relating phenomenology and theology in terms of short-comings as well as possibilities. In the concluding section, I bring together Kemp and Jørgensen and offer a reflection on what theology could and should be and why I believe that it still has a significant role to play in academia as well as in the wider culture. In particular, I argue that phenomenological theology—with its long tradition of reflecting on... (More)
- Inspired by the contemporary Danish philosopher Dorthe Jørgensen, this article engages in a re-reading of Peter Kemp’s 1973 dissertation Théorie de l’engagement with a view to exploring its persisting theological value. After briefly revisiting its main argument, I turn in the following section to a discussion of its way of relating phenomenology and theology in terms of short-comings as well as possibilities. In the concluding section, I bring together Kemp and Jørgensen and offer a reflection on what theology could and should be and why I believe that it still has a significant role to play in academia as well as in the wider culture. In particular, I argue that phenomenological theology—with its long tradition of reflecting on mythopoetic language—is particularly well-suited to provide a cultural hermeneutics of relevance not only for practicing religious people but also for a broader audience in a culture that is still to a high degree im-mersed in biblical imagery. (Less)
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https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/e46b4cf1-f61f-4aa0-9e46-5c2d71a0949d
- author
- Svenungsson, Jayne LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2021-03-11
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- Peter Kemp, Dorthe Jørgensen, phenomenology, poetic theology, secularization
- in
- Eco-Ethica
- volume
- 9 (2020)
- pages
- 17 - 34
- ISSN
- 2186-4802
- DOI
- 10.5840/ecoethica20213830
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- e46b4cf1-f61f-4aa0-9e46-5c2d71a0949d
- date added to LUP
- 2021-01-24 14:10:12
- date last changed
- 2021-03-23 11:37:27
@article{e46b4cf1-f61f-4aa0-9e46-5c2d71a0949d, abstract = {{Inspired by the contemporary Danish philosopher Dorthe Jørgensen, this article engages in a re-reading of Peter Kemp’s 1973 dissertation Théorie de l’engagement with a view to exploring its persisting theological value. After briefly revisiting its main argument, I turn in the following section to a discussion of its way of relating phenomenology and theology in terms of short-comings as well as possibilities. In the concluding section, I bring together Kemp and Jørgensen and offer a reflection on what theology could and should be and why I believe that it still has a significant role to play in academia as well as in the wider culture. In particular, I argue that phenomenological theology—with its long tradition of reflecting on mythopoetic language—is particularly well-suited to provide a cultural hermeneutics of relevance not only for practicing religious people but also for a broader audience in a culture that is still to a high degree im-mersed in biblical imagery.}}, author = {{Svenungsson, Jayne}}, issn = {{2186-4802}}, keywords = {{Peter Kemp; Dorthe Jørgensen; phenomenology; poetic theology; secularization}}, language = {{eng}}, month = {{03}}, pages = {{17--34}}, series = {{Eco-Ethica}}, title = {{Theology, Phenomenology and the Retrieval of Experience : A Homage to Peter Kemp}}, url = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.5840/ecoethica20213830}}, doi = {{10.5840/ecoethica20213830}}, volume = {{9 (2020)}}, year = {{2021}}, }