- Title Pages
- Transdisciplinary Theological Colloquia
- Acknowledgements
- Planetary Loves
- A Tentative Topography of Postcolonial Theology
- Situating Spivak
- What Has Love to Do with It? Planetarity, Feminism, and Theology
- The Love We Cannot Not Want: A Response to Kwok Pui-lan
-
Love: A Conversation
- The Pterodactyl in the Margins: Detranscendentalizing Postcolonial Theology
- Lost In Translation? Tracing Linguistic and Economic Transactions In Three Texts
-
Ghostly Encounters: Spirits, Memory, and the Holy Ghost
- Extempore Response to Susan Abraham, Tat-siong Benny Liew, and Mayra Rivera
- Planetary Subjects after the Death of Geography
- Love's Multiplicity: Jeong and Spivak's Notes toward Planetary Love
- Not Quite Not Agents of Oppression: Liberative Praxis for North American White Women
- Planetary Sightings? Negotiating Sexual Differences in Globalization's Shadow
-
“Effects of Grace”:
Detranscendentalizing
-
Comparative Theology after
“Religion”
- Toward a Cosmopolitan Theology: Constructing Public Theology from the Future
- Pax Terra and other Utopias? Planetarity, Cosmopolitanism, and the Kingdom of God
- Crip/tography: Of Karma and Cosmopolis
- Notes
- Contributors
- Index of Names
Crip/tography: Of Karma and Cosmopolis
Crip/tography: Of Karma and Cosmopolis
- Chapter:
- (p.303) Crip/tography: Of Karma and Cosmopolis
- Source:
- Planetary Loves
- Author(s):
SHARON V. BETCHER
- Publisher:
- Fordham University Press
This chapter focuses on the impact of globalization on human bodies as they are managed in global cities. In addition to uncovering the integration of colonial computations of the difference into the new forms of empire, it proposes a crip/topography: that is, it attempts to think “the crip” as a positionality from which to resist imperial norms.
Keywords: Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, globalization, the crip, imperial norms, global cities
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- Title Pages
- Transdisciplinary Theological Colloquia
- Acknowledgements
- Planetary Loves
- A Tentative Topography of Postcolonial Theology
- Situating Spivak
- What Has Love to Do with It? Planetarity, Feminism, and Theology
- The Love We Cannot Not Want: A Response to Kwok Pui-lan
-
Love: A Conversation
- The Pterodactyl in the Margins: Detranscendentalizing Postcolonial Theology
- Lost In Translation? Tracing Linguistic and Economic Transactions In Three Texts
-
Ghostly Encounters: Spirits, Memory, and the Holy Ghost
- Extempore Response to Susan Abraham, Tat-siong Benny Liew, and Mayra Rivera
- Planetary Subjects after the Death of Geography
- Love's Multiplicity: Jeong and Spivak's Notes toward Planetary Love
- Not Quite Not Agents of Oppression: Liberative Praxis for North American White Women
- Planetary Sightings? Negotiating Sexual Differences in Globalization's Shadow
-
“Effects of Grace”:
Detranscendentalizing
-
Comparative Theology after
“Religion”
- Toward a Cosmopolitan Theology: Constructing Public Theology from the Future
- Pax Terra and other Utopias? Planetarity, Cosmopolitanism, and the Kingdom of God
- Crip/tography: Of Karma and Cosmopolis
- Notes
- Contributors
- Index of Names