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Episode 2: Ch. 1 "A Hispanic Garden in a Foreign Land"
In the previous episode of our special project, Sacred Seminary Symposium, the host of Seminary for the Rest of Us (@seminaryshow), Sabrina Reyes-Peters (@_sdrp), and I dove into the short yet significant introduction of Mujerista Theology: A Theology for the Twenty-First Century by Ada Maria Isasi-Diaz. Sabrina noted in the show notes for this first episode, "There’s a lot to dig into, including privilege in theology, liberation, the kind of fruit theology produces..." And those themes continue in this second episode as we narrow in on chapter one: "A Hispanic Garden in a Foreign Land". We spent this segment addressing specifically the problem of white feminism, specifically white American feminism, the normativity of white cis-het patriarchal theology as a the plumb line to measure "other" theology (read: theology by non-male, non-white, non-hetero theologians), and the necessity to affirm the work of our sisters who have gone before us in this fight while building for future generations.
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Episode 2: Ch. 1 "A Hispanic Garden in a Foreign Land"
In the previous episode of our special project, Sacred Seminary Symposium, the host of Seminary for the Rest of Us (@seminaryshow), Sabrina Reyes-Peters (@_sdrp), and I dove into the short yet significant introduction of Mujerista Theology: A Theology for the Twenty-First Century by Ada Maria Isasi-Diaz. Sabrina noted in the show notes for this first episode, "There’s a lot to dig into, including privilege in theology, liberation, the kind of fruit theology produces..." And those themes continue in this second episode as we narrow in on chapter one: "A Hispanic Garden in a Foreign Land". We spent this segment addressing specifically the problem of white feminism, specifically white American feminism, the normativity of white cis-het patriarchal theology as a the plumb line to measure "other" theology (read: theology by non-male, non-white, non-hetero theologians), and the necessity to affirm the work of our sisters who have gone before us in this fight while building for future generations.