Emmanuel Katongole is professor of theology and peace studies at the Kroc Institute, Keough School of Global Affairs, and Department of Theology at the University of Notre Dame and Extraordinary Professor of Theology and Ecclesiology at the University of Stellenbosch in South Africa. He is author of several books, including The Sacrifice of Africa: A Political Theology for Africa and Born from Lament: The Theology and Politics of Hope in Africa.
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Description
Acknowledgments Introduction Part One: Who Are My People? Philosophical and Theological Reflections 1. On Being African 2. On Being an African Christian Part Two: Love's Invention in the Midst of Africa's Violent Modernity 3. Ethnic Violence and the Reinvention of Identity: 4. Religious Violence and the Reinvention of Politics: 5. Ecological Violence and the Reinvention of Land Conclusion Afterword: On Being Some Sort of Catholic: A Sermon Reference Notes Bibliography
"Emmanuel Katongole is quietly but beautifully introducing a new methodology for doing theology in Africa." -Stan Chu Ilo, author of A Poor and Merciful Church "Katongole compellingly demonstrates that African theologians and the church must revisit the conversation on identity and the contours of Christian conversion to reimagine solutions to the continent's perennial ecological and political challenges." -Reading Religion