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University of Dayton

2007

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Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities

The Marian Library Newsletter: Issue No. 53, University Of Dayton. Marian Library Dec 2007

The Marian Library Newsletter: Issue No. 53, University Of Dayton. Marian Library

Marian Library Newsletter

No abstract provided.


From The Editor’S Desk, Cyprian Davis O.S.B. Dec 2007

From The Editor’S Desk, Cyprian Davis O.S.B.

Journal of the Black Catholic Theological Symposium

The Journal of the Black Catholic Theological Symposium, Volume One, is a continuation of something that began almost thirty years ago. In Baltimore at the Motherhouse of the Oblate Sisters of Providence on Gunn Road was held the first meeting of African American theologians, historians, psychologists, liturgists, and other scholars. We had assembled to discuss our place as African American scholars and theologians in our Catholic Church. We were faced with two questions: Can one be a serious black Catholic theologian and can one be at the same time authentically black? As black Catholics, we were faced with a double …


Surviving Tenure: The Plight Of Black Faculty; A Panel Discussion, Kimberly Flint-Hamilton, Diane Batts Morrow, John Morrow Jr., Jamie T. Phelps O.P. Dec 2007

Surviving Tenure: The Plight Of Black Faculty; A Panel Discussion, Kimberly Flint-Hamilton, Diane Batts Morrow, John Morrow Jr., Jamie T. Phelps O.P.

Journal of the Black Catholic Theological Symposium

This essay, delivered during the 2006 Annual Meeting in Boston, presents four tenured professors from three different universities who discuss the unique problems faced by Black faculty at predominantly White institutions as they attempt to earn tenure and promotion. Chair Kimberly Flint-Hamilton provides the introductory remarks.


Committed To The Faith While Sticking Out Like A Sore Thumb: Stories Of Black Catholics On The Social Frontier, Robert L. Bartlett Dec 2007

Committed To The Faith While Sticking Out Like A Sore Thumb: Stories Of Black Catholics On The Social Frontier, Robert L. Bartlett

Journal of the Black Catholic Theological Symposium

Bartlett presents the results of a survey of Black Catholics in predominantly White parishes, a topic he presented in part during the 2002 Annual Meeting in Spokane, Washington. He focuses on the lived experiences of these Black Catholics who maneuver within what he terms “the social frontier” as they describe their challenges as they’ve tried, with mixed results, to practice their faith in the face of tension generated by racial, community, and personal pressures.


Economic Ethics And Implications For Health Care Access, Shawnee M. Daniels-Sykes S.S.N.D. Dec 2007

Economic Ethics And Implications For Health Care Access, Shawnee M. Daniels-Sykes S.S.N.D.

Journal of the Black Catholic Theological Symposium

In this paper, delivered in New Orleans at the 2004 Annual Meeting, Daniels-Sykes summarizes current scholarship on social justice and health care, inequality of access to health care and insurability, and welfare programs. She presents an analysis of Catholic theological ethics and its application in debates regarding access to health care.


Cover And Front Matter, Black Catholic Theological Symposium Dec 2007

Cover And Front Matter, Black Catholic Theological Symposium

Journal of the Black Catholic Theological Symposium

Cover, table of contents, administrative information


A Vision For The Future, Kimberly Flint-Hamilton Dec 2007

A Vision For The Future, Kimberly Flint-Hamilton

Journal of the Black Catholic Theological Symposium

Nearly thirty years ago, a group of young Catholic scholars gathered together to start what would be a long journey. The Reverend Thaddeus Posey convened them in 1978, and they met once again in 1979. They began meeting at that time because they all shared the same vision, to form a theology “that is authentically Black and truly Catholic,” as stated in what would become their Constitution.

More than a decade passed. Then, in 1991, Jamie T. Phelps, O.P., reconvened the group. Since then, the Black Catholic Theological Symposium has met almost every year, developing their vision together and offering …


Catholicism And The Color Line: Black Catholics Beyond The Veil, Cyprian Davis O.S.B. Dec 2007

Catholicism And The Color Line: Black Catholics Beyond The Veil, Cyprian Davis O.S.B.

Journal of the Black Catholic Theological Symposium

This paper, delivered in Atlanta, Georgia on October 9, 2003, was the keynote address of the 2003 Annual Meeting, which was dedicated to the centennial anniversary of W.E.B. DuBois’ The Souls of Black Folk. Here, Davis discusses the history of the ‘double consciousness’ as perceived by Black Catholics throughout the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.


Canons And Customs In Colonial Zimbabwe: Jesuits And African Marriage Practices, C. 1890-1967, Nicholas M. Creary Dec 2007

Canons And Customs In Colonial Zimbabwe: Jesuits And African Marriage Practices, C. 1890-1967, Nicholas M. Creary

Journal of the Black Catholic Theological Symposium

This article, delivered as a paper for the 2003 Annual Meeting in Atlanta, treats of African Marriage in Zimbabwe according to “Customary Law” and Western Christian Marriage according to Canon Law. In the beginning of colonialism the missionaries required observance of canonical requirements for Catholic marriage. The colonial government sought to regularize the African marriage traditions. The result was a lessening of Church marriages. This article is a report on the efforts made to renew inculturation in Zimbabwe from c. 1890 to 1967.


Concerned Philosophers For Peace, Vol. 27 (2007-2008), Concerned Philosophers For Peace Dec 2007

Concerned Philosophers For Peace, Vol. 27 (2007-2008), Concerned Philosophers For Peace

Concerned Philosophers for Peace

  • Human Rights and the Politics of Terrorism (by Richard T. Peterson)
  • Picnicking in the Afterglow of the Bomb (by Ron Hirschbein)
  • CPP Business Report (by Gail Presbey)
  • Pacifism or-Just War? (by Ashley Mateleska)
  • Dignified Political Action (by Court Lewis)
  • Remembering Anthony Benezet (by Greg Moses)
  • Last Conversation with Rob Gildert (by Richard Keshen)


A Genealogy Of The Confession Of Faith In Mennonite Perspective, Susan L. Trollinger Jul 2007

A Genealogy Of The Confession Of Faith In Mennonite Perspective, Susan L. Trollinger

English Faculty Publications

This essay offers a genealogy, in the Foucauldian sense, of the Confession of Faith in a Mennonite Perspective. Thus, it provides an account of the origins of the document and its uses over time with attention given to the politics of both. The essay argues that the Confession was critical for the merger of the General Conference Mennonite Church and the Mennonite Church especially as it took on the function of the "teaching position" of the church. By way of a case study, the essay explores recent uses to which the Confession has been put. The essay concludes by …


Review: 'The Gospel Of Faith And Justice', Cyril Orji Apr 2007

Review: 'The Gospel Of Faith And Justice', Cyril Orji

Religious Studies Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Review: 'Challenging Liberalism: Feminism As Political Critique', Rebecca Whisnant Mar 2007

Review: 'Challenging Liberalism: Feminism As Political Critique', Rebecca Whisnant

Philosophy Faculty Publications

In Challenging Liberalism: Feminism as Political Critique, Lisa Schwartzman brings her sharp interpretive and critical perspective to bear on the vexed relationship between feminism and liberal political philosophy. Noting (as have others before her) that the latter's central values -- such as autonomy, individual rights, and equality -- are both indispensable to and sometimes problematic for feminism, Schwartzman argues that these values must be reinterpreted in light of the insights gained from an alternative, non-liberal, and specifically feminist philosophical methodology. In this book, she explains why such an alternative methodology is needed, outlines some of its distinctive features, and …


Table Of Contents Jan 2007

Table Of Contents

Marian Library Studies

No abstract provided.


Francisco Suárez, S.J. (1548-1617) On Mary’S Virginitas In Partu And Subsequent Doctrinal Development, Robert L. Fastiggi Jan 2007

Francisco Suárez, S.J. (1548-1617) On Mary’S Virginitas In Partu And Subsequent Doctrinal Development, Robert L. Fastiggi

Marian Studies

No abstract provided.


Preface, Thomas A. Thompson Jan 2007

Preface, Thomas A. Thompson

Marian Studies

No abstract provided.


Mary's Virginity As "The Sign Of Her Faith": A Study Of The Nature-Grace Dynamic, Patricia A. Sullivan Jan 2007

Mary's Virginity As "The Sign Of Her Faith": A Study Of The Nature-Grace Dynamic, Patricia A. Sullivan

Marian Studies

No abstract provided.


Theotokos, Ever-Virgin, Bearer Of The Life-Giver A Patristic, Iconographic Image Of Virginity, Virginia M. Kimball Jan 2007

Theotokos, Ever-Virgin, Bearer Of The Life-Giver A Patristic, Iconographic Image Of Virginity, Virginia M. Kimball

Marian Studies

No abstract provided.


The Virginity Of Mary And Joseph In Light Of The Theology Of The Body, Marianne Trouvé Jan 2007

The Virginity Of Mary And Joseph In Light Of The Theology Of The Body, Marianne Trouvé

Marian Studies

No abstract provided.


Lyotard, Beckett, Duras, And The Postmodern Sublime, Andrew Slade Jan 2007

Lyotard, Beckett, Duras, And The Postmodern Sublime, Andrew Slade

English Faculty Publications

Samuel Beckett's texts are populated with characters who have been so deprived of their humanity that humanity appears as essentially absent from his texts. The characters' presence in the diegesis is marked by unmistakable absences-absence of vision, of mobility, of sense, of name. Beckett's characters are often without: without hair, without teeth, without foreseeable future. The human character is at the limit of humanity and runs the risk of passing over into the grey zone of the inhuman. They lose track of their place, of their time, of their names. They frequently belong to no time and no place. When …


Differend, Sexual Difference, And The Sublime, Andrew Slade Jan 2007

Differend, Sexual Difference, And The Sublime, Andrew Slade

English Faculty Publications

The aim of this chapter is to articulate how two key feminist writers, Marguerite Duras and Luce lrigaray, engage and rewrite Lyotard's interest in the sublime as a feminist aesthetic category. Jean-François Lyotard was at the vanguard of a retrieval of the category of the sublime in contemporary aesthetic theory. A trenchantly polymorphous philosopher, he wrote of the sublime in a range of styles that rivals the old masters of aesthetics, who not only mastered the thought, but were themselves sublime in their works. Whereas the tradition of aesthetics almost unequivocally aligns the sublime with the masculine and the feminine …


Global Feminist Ethics: Feminist Ethics And Social Theory, Rebecca Whisnant, Peggy Desautels Jan 2007

Global Feminist Ethics: Feminist Ethics And Social Theory, Rebecca Whisnant, Peggy Desautels

Philosophy Faculty Publications

This volume contains four sections, the first of which examines some of the special moral concerns that arise from assigning distinct activities and responsibilities to women and men respectively. It is difficult to argue against the view that women and not men are the birth-givers. But it is also true that death rates tied to pregnancy and birth-giving are unacceptably high in developing countries. Are women better off giving birth in hospitals with attending physicians (often male) or in homes with attending midwives (usually female)? Which approach should be "exported" to the developing world?

In the first chapter, "Exporting Childbirth," …


A Pragmatist Cosmopolitan Moment: Reconfiguring Nussbaum's Cosmopolitan Concentric Circles, Marilyn Fischer Jan 2007

A Pragmatist Cosmopolitan Moment: Reconfiguring Nussbaum's Cosmopolitan Concentric Circles, Marilyn Fischer

Philosophy Faculty Publications

Robert Fine and Robin Cohen conclude their essay “Four Cosmopolitan Moments” by stating that developing cosmopolitanism “has become an urgent moral necessity” (2002, 162). As resources for this task they offer the Stoics, Kant, Arendt, and Nussbaum as particularly important “moments” in the history of cosmopolitanism. David Held (2002, 57) shares their sense of urgency but worries that a Kantian understanding of political communities gives an inadequate basis for this task. David Hollinger identifies as “new cosmopolitans” an array of scholars who articulate alternatives to Nussbaum's universalism and Kymlicka's pluralism, in attempting “to connect the notion of a species-wide community …


Caring Globally: Jane Addams, World War One, And International Hunger, Marilyn Fischer Jan 2007

Caring Globally: Jane Addams, World War One, And International Hunger, Marilyn Fischer

Philosophy Faculty Publications

Several feminist philosophers, including Virginia Held, Joan Tronto, and Fiona Robinson, see the need for, and the potential of, care ethics for achieving far-reaching political and even global transformation. Tronto recommends that care be used as "a basis for political change" and a "strategy for organizing" (Tronto 1993, 175). Held advocates that "the ethics of care should transform international politics and relations between states as well as within them" (Held 2006, 161).

During and immediately after World War One, Jane Addams attempted to do just that. She sought to bring perspectives and moral sensibilities that have since been theorized in …


Letter From A War Zone: Some Thoughts On Setting An Activist Agenda, Rebecca Whisnant Jan 2007

Letter From A War Zone: Some Thoughts On Setting An Activist Agenda, Rebecca Whisnant

Philosophy Faculty Publications

Essay is from a conference sponsored by Captive Daughters and DePaul University in Chicago.


Music Therapy Improvisation For Groups: Essential Leadership Competencies, Susan Gardstrom Jan 2007

Music Therapy Improvisation For Groups: Essential Leadership Competencies, Susan Gardstrom

Music Faculty Publications

This book contains 80 exercises designed to reinforce a variety of competencies. Exercises represent three types of learning that have emerged as invariable aspects of the introductory course:

  • Didactic learning
  • Experiential learning
  • Independent skill development

Didactic learning relates to philosophical, theoretical, and/or practical information that is communicated via lecture, discussion, and modeling.

Experiential learning refers to the students' firsthand experiences in the learning/therapy group process that accompanies didactic instruction. In this form of learning, students have opportunities to observe, participate in, co-lead, lead, and verbally process improvisation experiences.

In independent skill development, students engage in skill-building experiences independently and with …


Hymn To St. Joseph (Lootens), Harold Lootens S.M. Jan 2007

Hymn To St. Joseph (Lootens), Harold Lootens S.M.

Musical Compositions about the Marianist Charism

Praise of St. Joseph


Mary Immaculate Star Of The Morning, Harold Lootens S.M. Jan 2007

Mary Immaculate Star Of The Morning, Harold Lootens S.M.

Musical Compositions about the Marianist Charism

In praise of Mary


Even The Good Guys Are Bad In Sin City, Melanie Woods Jan 2007

Even The Good Guys Are Bad In Sin City, Melanie Woods

Joyce Durham Essay Contest in Women's and Gender Studies

No abstract provided.


Title Page, Mariological Society Of America Jan 2007

Title Page, Mariological Society Of America

Marian Studies

No abstract provided.