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Women in Christianity in the Modern Age examines the role of women in Christianity in the 20th and early 21st Centuries. This edited volume includes eight important contributions from academics in the field.
Introduction. 1. One Woman, Two Churches Theologies of Women 1920-1960. 2. The Role of Mary in the 20th & 21st centuries. 3. Female Saints - Women Saints Since 1920: A wider circle? 4.Embodied Knowing, Science & Technology in the 20th & 21st Centuries. 5. Women’s Christian Ministry of Teaching, Preaching and Leadership in 20th & 21st Centuries. 6.Women and Philosophy of Religion in the 20th and 21st Centuries7.Sugar and Spice: Popular Beliefs About Women in the 20th and 21st Centuries. 8. Women, Art Making and Feminist Theology in the 20th and 21st Centuries.
Megan Clay is an Honorary Research Fellow at UWTSD Lampeter, Wales. She is an Artist and Feminist Liberation Theologian and she heads the Feminist Theology and Art Forum set up in 2014. The forum has held four successful exhibitions which she organised and curated at the University of Winchester the last of which in 2019, produced a book, Megan Clay, (ed.), Enfleshing the Unconscious: Feminist Imaginings. Her PhD thesis which was both painted and written ‘Dancing in the Cosmos: Looking Toward Liberating Theological models for Children’s Spirituality and Sexuality’. She has published articles in the Journal of Feminist Theology and has recently become an executive editor of the journal. She is the Chairperson for the European Society for Women in Theological Research, (ESWTR) UK and is on the organising team for Britain and Ireland Summer School (BISFT).
Lisa Isherwood is Professor Emerita of Feminist Liberation Theologies at the University of Winchester and Postgraduate Research Supervisor at UWTSD, Wales. Her work explores the nature of incarnation within a contemporary context and includes such areas as the body, gender, sexuality and eco-theology. She is extensively published, has lectured across Europe, India, USA, Australia and Canada. In 2009 she was Vice President of the European Society of Women in Theological Research. In 1988 she was a co-founder of the Britain and Ireland School of Feminist Theology and a year later of the Journal of Feminist Theology of which she remains an executive editor.