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Doing Asian American Theology
Paperback
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The American Society of Missiology Book Award Winner
"Asian American theology is about God revealed in Jesus Christ in covenantal relationship with Asian Americans qua Asian Americans. Thus, Asian American theology is about Asian Americans as well, as human covenant partners alongside of God."
In Doing Asian American Theology, Daniel D. Lee focuses on Asian American identity and its relationship to faith and theology, providing avocabulary and grammar, and laying out a methodology for Asian American theologies in their ethnic, generational, and regional differences. Lee's framework for Asian American theological contextuality proposes an Asian American quadrilateral of theintersection of Asian heritage, migration experience, American culture, and racialization. This methodology incorporates the need for personal integration and communal journey, especially in the work of Asian American ministry. With interdisciplinaryinsights from interpersonal neurobiology and trauma theory, he offers a process of integration and reconciliation for Asian American theologies in service of Asian American communities of every kind.
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Contextuality and Particularity
2. Election and Gentileness
3. Asian America and the Asian American Quadrilateral
4. Asian Heritage and Cultural Archetypes
5. Migration and Loss
6. American Culture and Representation
7. Racialization and Navigating the Binary
8. Fragmentation and Integration
9. Embodiment and Ecclesiology
Invitation
Name Index
Subject Index
Scripture Index