This study contextualizes the case of the medieval disabled Benedictine monk and scholar Hermanus of the Reichenau with modern theological approaches to disability, resulting in the challenge of several assumptions. Neither Hermanus’ theology nor his identity are defined by his disability. This is both confirmed and contradicted by modern theologians. Liberation from expectations such as virtuous suffering and the importance of mutuality and community emerge as keys to a self-determined successful life fulfilling Shakespeare’s concept of a ‘narrative’. An explicit disability theology is not only not necessary, but may be counterproductive and limiting, both of God and of self
This study is an exercise in understanding both doctrinally and pastorally the nature of knowledge ...
In der vorliegenden Arbeit werden zunächst die Anfänge der Disability Studies, ihre spezifischen For...
Disability scholars often speak to the identity of people with disabilities. The communicatio idiom...
The concept of human flourishing currently holds a position of prominence within Christian theology....
This practical theological study draws on the theological method of Don S. Browning to implement a m...
This dissertation has the intention of furthering the discussion of disability issues in our present...
This article is both an attempt to analyse disability, as a precise aspect of suffering, and also a ...
In the context of theological interpretations of disabilities, I am arguing for the concept of “stre...
Examines the role that disability, both as a concept and an experience, played in seventeenth-centur...
A person with disabilities is a person suffering from some acquired or congenital dysfunctions in t...
What, if any, is a Christian theological perspective on disability? Studies of disability in a theol...
Intellectual disability, and in particular profound intellectual disability, has an impact on all a...
Disability is a modern concept that, according to a cultural model, outlines how impairment is judge...
This first book-length treatment of Paul and disability builds on recent advances in the field of di...
The Middles Ages are often portrayed as a time in which people with physical disabilities in the Lat...
This study is an exercise in understanding both doctrinally and pastorally the nature of knowledge ...
In der vorliegenden Arbeit werden zunächst die Anfänge der Disability Studies, ihre spezifischen For...
Disability scholars often speak to the identity of people with disabilities. The communicatio idiom...
The concept of human flourishing currently holds a position of prominence within Christian theology....
This practical theological study draws on the theological method of Don S. Browning to implement a m...
This dissertation has the intention of furthering the discussion of disability issues in our present...
This article is both an attempt to analyse disability, as a precise aspect of suffering, and also a ...
In the context of theological interpretations of disabilities, I am arguing for the concept of “stre...
Examines the role that disability, both as a concept and an experience, played in seventeenth-centur...
A person with disabilities is a person suffering from some acquired or congenital dysfunctions in t...
What, if any, is a Christian theological perspective on disability? Studies of disability in a theol...
Intellectual disability, and in particular profound intellectual disability, has an impact on all a...
Disability is a modern concept that, according to a cultural model, outlines how impairment is judge...
This first book-length treatment of Paul and disability builds on recent advances in the field of di...
The Middles Ages are often portrayed as a time in which people with physical disabilities in the Lat...
This study is an exercise in understanding both doctrinally and pastorally the nature of knowledge ...
In der vorliegenden Arbeit werden zunächst die Anfänge der Disability Studies, ihre spezifischen For...
Disability scholars often speak to the identity of people with disabilities. The communicatio idiom...