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Overview

What might we learn if the study of ethics focused less on hard cases and more on the practices of everyday life? In Everyday Ethics, Michael Lamb and Brian Williams gather some of the world’s leading scholars and practitioners of moral theology (including some GUP authors) to explore that question in dialogue with anthropology and the social sciences. Inspired by the work of Michael Banner, these scholars cross disciplinary boundaries to analyze the ethics of ordinary practices—from eating, learning, and loving thy neighbor to borrowing and spending, using technology, and working in a flexible economy. Along the way, they consider the moral and methodological questions that emerge from this interdisciplinary dialogue and assess the implications for the future of moral theology.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781626167070
Publisher: Georgetown University Press
Publication date: 10/01/2019
Pages: 264
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x (d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Michael Lamb is Director of the Program for Leadership and Character and Assistant Professor of Politics, Ethics, and Interdisciplinary Humanities at Wake Forest University.

Brian Williams is Dean of the Templeton Honors College and Assistant Professor of Ethics and Liberal Studies at Eastern University.

Table of Contents

Introduction Contextualizing Everyday Ethics: Moral Theology Meets Anthropology and the Social SciencesMichael Lamb and Brian A. Williams

Part I: Evaluating Banner's Proposal: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Meaning and Method

1. Toward an Ethics of Social PracticeMolly Farneth

2. Engaging the Everyday in Womanist Ethics and Mujerista TheologyStephanie Mota Thurston

3. Social Anthropology, Ethnography, and the Ordinary Morgan Clarke

4. "The Everyday" against the "and" in "Theology and Social Science"Brian Brock

Part II: Practices of Everyday Ethics: Extending the Proposal

5. Forming Humanity: Practices of Education Christianly ConsideredJennifer A. Herdt

6. Charity, Justice, and the Ethics of Humanitarianism Eric Gregory

7. The Elimination of the Human within the Technological Society Craig M. Gay

8. On New New Things: Work and Christian Thought in Flexible Capitalism Philip Lorish

9. The Everyday Ethics of Borrowing and Spending: Evaluating Economic Risk and RewardJustin Welby

10. Sharing Tables: The Embodied Ethics of Eating and Joining Rachel Muers

Part III: Everyday Ethics: A Future for Moral Theology?

11. The Tasks of Christian Ethics: Theology, Ethnography, and the Conundrums of the Cultural Turn Luke Bretherton

12. Sacramental Ethics and the Future of Moral TheologyCharles Mathewes

13. Confessions of a Moderately (Un)Repentant SinnerMichael Banner

AppendixEveryday Ethics: A Bibliographic Essay Patrick McKearney

List of Contributors Index

What People are Saying About This

Jonathan Chaplin

This is a fresh, insightful and highly stimulating contribution to debates about the nature of Christian ethics and the relation between theology and the social sciences. The book responds to Michael Banner’s important recent proposal that theological ethics be grounded in an “everyday ethics” schooled by social anthropology. Banner’s intervention is one of the most fruitful and creative contributions to the field in the last decade and, as such, both merits and needs contextualization and critical interpretation. This collection offers precisely that, serving as an excellent ‘companion’ to Banner, while also extending his insights into new areas and complementing and challenging it with a range of new perspectives. Much more than a dialogue with a single thinker, the book turns out to be an authoritative guide into many of the contemporary concerns and possibilities of theological ethics as a whole.

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