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Vocation And The Politics Of Work Popular Theology In A Consumer Culture Jeffrey Scholes

  • SKU: BELL-24567626
Vocation And The Politics Of Work Popular Theology In A Consumer Culture Jeffrey Scholes
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Vocation And The Politics Of Work Popular Theology In A Consumer Culture Jeffrey Scholes instant download after payment.

Publisher: Lexington Books
File Extension: PDF
File size: 1.46 MB
Author: Jeffrey Scholes
ISBN: 9780739178904, 9780739178911, 0739178903, 0739178911, 2012046617
Language: English
Year: 2013

Product desciption

Vocation And The Politics Of Work Popular Theology In A Consumer Culture Jeffrey Scholes by Jeffrey Scholes 9780739178904, 9780739178911, 0739178903, 0739178911, 2012046617 instant download after payment.

Since Martin Luther, vocations or callings have had a close relationship with daily work. It is a give-and-take relationship in which the meaning of a vocation typically negotiates with the kinds of work available (and vice-versa) at any given time. While “vocation language” still has currency in Western culture, today's predominant meaning of vocation has little to do with the actual work performed on a job. Jeffrey Scholes contends that recent theological treatments of the Protestant concept of vocation, both academic and popular, often unwittingly collude with consumer culture to circulate a concept of vocation that is detached from the material conditions of work. The result is a consumer-friendly vocation that is rendered impotent to inform and, if necessary, challenge the political norms of the workplace. For example, he classifies Rick Warren's concept of “purpose” in his best-selling book, The Purpose-Driven Life, as a functional equivalent of vocation that acts in this way. Other popular uses of vocation along with insights culled from traditional theology and consumer culture studies help Scholes reveal the current state of vocations in the West. Using recent scholarship in the field of political theology, he argues that resisting commodification is a possibility and a prerequisite for a “political vocation,” if it is at all able to engage the norms that regulate and undermine the pursuit of justice in many modern workplaces.

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