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Hosting the Stranger: Between Religions
Hosting the Stranger: Between Religions
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Description
Hosting the Stranger features ten powerful meditations on the theme of interreligious hospitality by eminent scholars and practitioners from the five different wisdom traditions: Jewish, Christian, Hindu, Buddhist and Islamic. By gathering thinkers from different religious traditions around the same timely topic of what it means to 'host the stranger,' this text enacts the hospitality it investigates, facilitating a hopeful and constructive dialogue between the world's major religions.
Table of Contents
PART ONE: HOSTING THE STRANGER
Chapter 1: Hospitality in Translation: Hosting the Stranger as a Work of Mourning
James Taylor
Chapter 2: Western Hospitality to Eastern Thought
Joseph O'Leary
Chapter 3: Interreligious Hospitality and its Limits
Catherine Cornille
Chapter 4: Departures: Hospitality as Mediation
Kalpana Seshadri
Chapter 5: Misgivings About Misgivings and the Nature of a Home: Some Reflections
on the Role of Jewish Tradition in Derrida's Account of Hospitality
Jacob Meskin
PART TWO: INTERRELIGIOUS HOSPITALITY
I. Jewish Perspectives
Chapter 6: The Open Tent: Angels and Strangers
Edward Kaplan
Chapter 7: Sukkot: Levinas and the Festival of the Cabins
Hugh Cummins
II. Christian Perspectives
Chapter 8: Hospitable by Calling, Inhospitable by Nature
Patrick Hederman
Chapter 9: Biblical, Ethical and Hermeneutical Reflections On Narrative Hospitality
Marianne Moyaert
III. Buddhist Perspectives
Chapter 10: The Awakening of Hospitality
John Makransky
Chapter 11: Buddhism and Hospitality: Expecting the Unexpected and Acting Virtuously
Andy Rotman
IV. Islamic Perspectives
Chapter 12: The Dead and the City: The Limits of Hospitality in the Early Modern
Levant
Dana Sajdi
Chapter 13: Some Reflections on Hospitality in Islam
Joseph Lumbard
V. Hindu Perspectives
Chapter 14: Food, the Guest, and the Taittiriya Upanisad: Hospitality in the Hindu
Traditions
Francis Clooney
Chapter 15: God as Guest: Hospitality in Hindu Culture
Swami Tyagananda
NOTES
CONTRIBUTORS
Product details
Published | 10 Mar 2011 |
---|---|
Format | Ebook (PDF) |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 192 |
ISBN | 9781441199249 |
Imprint | Continuum |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Hosting the Stranger is an exciting contribution to a new generation of inter-religious dialogue and scholarship - harmonizing an explicit hopefulness for hospitality within and between religions with an insistent respect for differing understandings of what constitutes hospitality. The book presses the urgency of the need for inter-religious hospitality without ignoring the risk entailed in 'welcoming the stranger'. It is a wonderfully balanced collection of essays bringing together theoretical and methodological investigations with a number of concrete discussions of the sources, understandings, and examples of hospitality in five different religious traditions. Accessible, yet historically attuned and theoretically nuanced, this collection of essays on hospitality in religion is an indispensable resource for students of religious studies as well as religious practitioners engaged in inter-religious dialogue.
Tamsin Jones, Lecturer on Religion, Director of Undergraduate Studies, Harvard University, USA
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This is an important, open-hearted and useful collection of essays on the subject of hospitality, which often takes language as the first sign of its difficulty. The ghosts of Ricoeur and Derrida haunt the first half of the volume, and then it opens into Jewish, Christian, Buddhist, Islamic and Hindu perspectives on the subject of welcome in which God is the long-awaited guest. Almost any one of these essays could be read by students in a number of disciplines; the volume opens doors to discussions about translation and uprootedness, liturgies and history. They are written with great clarity and ease by people who know their subject and want to share it. It is, as its title suggests, a cheering book.
Fanny Howe, Chair, Lannan Center for Poetics and Social Practice, Georgetown University
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this volume of high quality and accessible papers probes hospitality as a task toward the stranger, alien, and victim through Jewish, Christian, Islamic, Hindu, and Buddhist wisdom traditions (Part 2) under the hermeneutical influence of Levinas and Derrida (Part 1)... [It] will invigorate student learning in university classrooms across an array of theological subdisciplines for all intent on responding constructively to the scandals of alienation, violence, and their religious legitimation.
Religious Studies Review