Lexington Books
Pages: 288
Trim: 6¼ x 9⅜
978-1-4985-5641-5 • Hardback • May 2018 • $142.00 • (£109.00)
978-1-4985-5642-2 • eBook • May 2018 • $134.50 • (£104.00)
Lisa Stenmark teaches humanities and comparative religious studies at San Jose State University.
Whitney Bauman is associate professor of religious studies at Florida International University.
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Lisa Stenmark and Whitney Bauman
1. Both/And: Science, Religion, and the Fluidity of Identity
Philip Clayton and Kirianna Florez
2. If You Quare It You Can Change It: Changing the Boxes That Bind Us
Emilie M. Townes
3. Thinking through Three Revolutions: Religion, Science and Colonialism
Lisa Stenmark
4. Queering Authority in Science and Religion
Whitney Bauman
5. Polyamorous Bastards: James Baldwin and Desires of a Queer African-American Religious Naturalism
Carol Wayne White
6. Slenderman: A Trans Hermeneutic of the Apocalypse
Teresa Hornsby
7. ‘Nothing in This World is Indifferent to Us’: A Dialogical Reflection on the Queerness of Theology and Science
Catherine Keller and Laurel Schneider
8. Queering the Dissident Body: Race, Sex, and Disability in Rabbinic Blessings on Bodily Difference
Julia Watts Belser
9. ‘Adam is Not Man: The Queer Body before Genesis 2:22 (and after)
Zairong Xiang
10. Gender and Indeterminacy in Jewish Mystical Imagery
Fern Feldman
11. Toward a Bright and Messy Future: The Global Ecological Crisis, the Problem of Heteronormative Bias, and the Necessity of a Queer Ecological Imagination
Alex Carr Johnson
12. Queering the Library of Congress
Carlos Fernandez
Petrichor: An Afterword
Timothy Morton
Annotated Bibliography
About the Contributors
This collection offers new and exciting methodologies for teaching SRD and the myriad applications of queer theory.
— Religious Studies Review
Unsettling Science and Religion is a volume eager to be useful to teachers and researchers. The introductory materials contain an overview of the scholars most frequently drawn on by the contributors, a brief intellectual history of the volume’s major areas, and promptings for what direction the conversation is, and should continue, developing in. The contribution of each author is summarized by the editors at the beginning, and in the afterword by Morton, and here again in this review, giving each author and reader ample opportunity to see how the work has been glossed. Each short chapter has a substantial bibliography, and the collection closes with an annotated bibliography that will be useful to readers trying to choose from among the wealth of resources suggested throughout.— Reading Religion
The science-religion-queer theory relationship is like a challenging game of three-dimensional tic-tac-toe. These erudite writers demonstrate the complexities as assumptions that grounded each leg of the tripod are not so systematically dismantled. They bravely acknowledge that all intellectual bets are off, but just as courageously insist that all justice claims are on. This book opens a conversation that will span generations and reshape reality.— Mary E. Hunt, Co-director, Women’s Alliance for Theology, Ethics, and Ritual (WATER)
This exciting volume of essays represents one of the first collective attempts to ‘queer’ the relationship between religion and science. Ranging across a number of scholarly topics, the authors show not simply how queer theories and religious studies can engage science, but more importantly how science and religion need to be rethought in relation to queer theories—especially since nature, bodies, evolution, religious traditions, and even the physical universe and the divine are already in certain respects queer. They also address a series of complex, and often controversial, social and political issues, including racism, colonialism, and ecological devastation. The book should be widely read by scholars from many fields, but especially those interested in science and religion discourses and queer theories.— Ken Stone, Chicago Theological Seminary
As the first volume in the news series “Religion and Science as a Critical Discourse,” Unsettling Science and Religion: Contributions and Questions from Queer Studies, convincingly demonstrates the value of pursuing potentially unsettling questions across a number of disciplinary fields in order to tackle complex questions raised in religion and science. Stenmark and Bauman’s introduction alone, together with the helpful annotated bibliography at the end of the volume, will be useful to a great variety of readers interested in an introduction to current challenging issues at various queer-religion-science intersections.
The essays collected offer a range of intriguing explorations of the academic disciplines, explore possible and necessary connections and challenges, often in (intentionally) unsettling ways. Topics can range from Adam to the Apocalypse; they might explore rabbinic discourse on dissident bodies or engage in dialogue about the queerness of theology and science; authors might unsettle and queer authority in science, propose a queer African-American naturalism, or examine historical shifts in Colonialism alongside those in religion and science.Readers assuming what topics and approaches they will encounter are in for a surprise, as this book takes them on a wild ride, exploring a dizzying (but entirely necessary) variety of approaches to central topics and important problems at the complex intersection of religion and science.— Claudia Schippert, University of Central Florida