Loading...

Vulnerability and Courage

A Pastoral Theology of Poverty and the Alienated Self

by Hyon-Uk Shin (Author)
©2012 Monographs IX, 161 Pages
Series: Practical Theology, Volume 3

Summary

Vulnerability and Courage examines the influence of poverty on the experience of self among adolescents. It explores psychosocial and theological aspects of poverty and alienation from ontological and existential perspectives. Although poverty and alienation are typically considered from sociological or ethical perspectives, this book focuses on the psychosocial mechanisms that impact character and identity formation and on their pastoral theological implications. To this end, Vulnerability and Courage examines Erich Fromm’s discourses on an inauthentic pseudo-self as well as Erik Erikson’s view on an individual’s identity formation. In addition, it points to the innately existential impact of the experience of poverty by means of Paul Tillich’s ontological understanding of alienation. The main theme is that psychological and existential perspectives on poverty enrich discourses on alienation as a window through which we can see the multi-layered structure or mechanism of economic vulnerability, a structure that through various means can hugely influence one’s life.

Details

Pages
IX, 161
Year
2012
ISBN (Hardcover)
9781433118500
Language
English
Keywords
poverty Christentum alienation
Published
New York, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, Oxford, Wien, 2012. X, 161 pp.

Biographical notes

Hyon-Uk Shin (Author)

Hyon-Uk Shin served as chaplain at Emory Healthcare in Atlanta, Georgia. He studied at Yonsei University, Emory University, and Princeton Theological Seminary, where he received his PhD. Shin is now teaching at Soongsil University and Seoul Women's University in Seoul, Republic of Korea.

Previous

Title: Vulnerability and Courage