How Postmodernism Serves (My) Faith: Questioning Truth in Language, Philosophy and Art

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InterVarsity Press, May 15, 2006 - Religion - 240 pages

Thinking that postmodernism is a threat, many Christians take a duck-and-cover approach to dealing with it. But that will not make postmodernism go away. Can Christians learn from postmodern thinkers and their critique of modernism? Yes, says author Crystal L. Downing. Postmodernism should not be judged by some of the problematic practices carried out in its name. In a lively engagement with literature, philosophy and art, Downing introduces readers to what postmodernism is and where it came from, aiming to show how Christians can best understand, critique and even benefit from its insights. She draws on her own experiences as a graduate student and her careful research into this worldview's modernist and artistic origins, the challenges of foundationalism and poststructuralism, and the complexity of relativism. She ends with a challenge to Christians: that they not be postmodern in their attitudes towards postmodernism, but instead to "be in the world and not of it" and to extend grace where it is most needed. Downing believes that the challenges, questions and insights of postmodernism can contribute to a deeper and clearer grasp of our faith, as well as providing unique paradigms for sharing the truth of Christ.

 

Contents

List of Illustrations
9
LINING UP THE DUCKS
15
Biographical Backgrounds
30
A History of Modernism
53
The Arts
78
THE ANTIFOUNDATIONAL FOUNDATIONS OF POSTMODERNISM
99
The Posting of Structuralism
123
The Cultural Construction of Knowledge
148
THE HAUNTING OF RELATIVISM
181
The Best andWorst of Postmodernism
209
Influential Postmodern Publications of the 1960s
231
Copyright

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About the author (2006)

Crystal L. Downing (Ph.D., University of California, Santa Barbara) is associate professor of English and film studies at Messiah College in Grantham, Pennsylvania. She has published articles in Books Culture, Cresset, CrossCurrents, College Literature, Literature/Film Quarterly and Religion and the Arts, and is also the author of Writing Performances: The Stages of Dorothy L. Sayers.

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