Lexington Books
Pages: 230
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-1-4985-5911-9 • Hardback • December 2017 • $117.00 • (£90.00)
978-1-4985-5912-6 • eBook • December 2017 • $111.00 • (£85.00)
Richard Coble, PhD is associate pastor of congregational care and adult education at Grace Covenant Presbyterian Church and adjunct professor of pastoral care for Lexington Theological Seminary.
Introduction
1. Modern Hospital Chaplaincy: Negotiations
2. The Biopolitical Sphere: Theories of Spirituality and Chaplaincy Care
3. Selling Life, Silencing Death in Current Healthcare Biopolitics
4. Bio-Psycho-Socio-Spiritual Medicine
5. How to Subvert the Biopolitics of Healthcare I: The Chaplain’s Experience
6. How to Subvert the Biopolitics of Healthcare II: The Chaplain’s Language
Conclusion: Self-Loss and a Biopolitics of Life
Coble’s book is an important addition to pastoral care literature. This is a book all chaplains and pastoral care scholars will want to read.
— Religious Studies Review
Richard Coble cuts straight through the overwhelming rush of today’s medical complex, offering not only a brilliant analysis of healthcare’s technological prowess but also wise and experienced guidance about how chaplains might subvert its relentless obliteration of death and help us grasp death’s loss, catching a glimmer of the transcendent. Anabsolutely essential and unique guide for understanding chaplaincy in advanced postmodern society.— Bonnie J. Miller-McLemore, Vanderbilt University
When I was a chaplain I was confused by the chaplaincy literature’s language of non-anxious presence. It did not seem complex enough for what I did. Coble helps me interpret this by describing how hospitals are places to treat death, while chaplains honor the void after death—without much of an agenda—and then state the name of God, which is something new and unexpected. Coble understands what it is like to be a chaplain, and he uses Foucault, Esposito, Nancy, Bataille, and Derrida to deftly explain the work to readers. Chaplains and pastoral care professionals will understand what they do, say, and write in medical charts better from reading this book.— Philip Browning Helsel, Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary
Coble brilliantly analyzes the political trajectories of healthcare that co-opt chaplains into helping patients accept death. Elegantly and cogently written, this book offers subversive theological ways for chaplains and religious leaders to journey into the void of death and lament its profound losses with those who are dying.— Carrie Doehring, Iliff School of Theology
Drawing on both critical theory and personal experience, Richard Coble offers those who work in pastoral theology—whether as caregivers or as academics—a much-needed analysis of hospital chaplaincy. The Chaplain’s Presence and Medical Power is as political as it is pastoral and, with this book, Coble has established himself as an exciting emerging voice in pastoral care.— Nathan Carlin, McGovern Medical School
Coble brilliantly analyzes the political trajectories of healthcare that co-opt chaplains into helping patients accept death. Elegantly and cogently written, this book offers subversive theological ways for chaplains and religious leaders to journey into the void of death and lament its profound losses with those who are dying.— Carrie Doehring, Iliff School of Theology
Drawing on both critical theory and personal experience, Richard Coble offers those who work in pastoral theology—whether as caregivers or as academics—a much-needed analysis of hospital chaplaincy. The Chaplain’s Presence and Medical Power is as political as it is pastoral and, with this book, Coble has established himself as an exciting emerging voice in pastoral care.— Nathan Carlin, McGovern Medical School
I recommend this book for a detailed argument of resistance to over-medicalisation and the important role of the chaplain in end of life care. While these are well rehearsed arguments, this book adds depth to the case.— Practical Theology
This book will be most relevant to chaplains and to CPE directors and tutors. The author invites readers to look carefully at the place one is employed including its unspoken assumptions, at one’s profession, and at one’s life as a believer in this setting. It is an invitation that should not be missed.— Journal of Pastoral Care & Counseling