Encyclopedia of Women and Religion in North America: Women and religion: methods of study and reflection

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Indiana University Press, 2006 - Women - 1394 pages
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A fundamental and well-illustrated reference collection for anyone interested in the role of women in North American religious life.
 

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Contents

Jewish Women and Ritual
xiii
American Indian Boarding Schools 97
xix
Other Religions
xx
Appropriation of Native American Religious
xxv
Sikh Women in North America
xxvii
The Deaconess Movement 821
xxxiv
Women in Communitarian Societies
xlii
Women in Theological Education 923 Frances Kissling
1
Women and African American Denominations
250
Women of Anabaptist Traditions
262
Women in the American Episcopal Church
269
Women in the Anglican Church in Canada
279
Baptist Women
285
Christian ChurchDisciples of Christ Tradition
296
Women and Lutheranism
307
Methodist Women
319

Methods of Study
3
Religions and Modern Feminism
11
Womens Spiritual Biography and Autobiography
68
Native American Women and Christianity 89 Council 11
200
Women
209
Protestantism
219
Women and Protestantism in Colonial
225
Southern Colonial Protestant Women
236
Protestantism in British North America Canada
242
Quaker Women in North America
329
Women in Reformed Churches
341
Presbyterian Women in America
352
Women in the United Church of Canada
361
Women in the United Church of Christ
368
Women in the Unitarian Universalist Movement
380
728
474
Asian Pacific American Protestant Women
498
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About the author (2006)

American feminist theologian Rosemary Radford Ruether was born in St. Paul, Minnesota. Ruether graduated from Scripps College in 1958 and received her doctorate in classics and patristics from Claremont Graduate School in 1956. In 1976 she became Georgia Harkness Professor of Theology at Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary, a position she continues to hold. An activist in the civil rights and peace movements of the 1960s, Ruether turned her energies to the emerging women's movement. During the 1970s and successive decades, feminist concerns impelled her to rethink historical theology, analyzing the patriarchal biases in both Christianity and Judaism that elevated male gender at the expense of women. Her rigorous scholarship has challenged many of the assumptions of traditionally male-dominated Christian theology. Recognized as one of the most prolific and readable Catholic writers, Ruether's work represents a significant contribution to contemporary theology, and her views have influenced a generation of scholars and theologians. Her imprint on feminist theology has been reinforced by her lectureships at a number of universities in the United States and abroad.

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