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Awards
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Sarah McFarland TaylorPublisher: Harvard University Press Imprint: Harvard University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.581kg ISBN: 9780674034952ISBN 10: 0674034953 Pages: 384 Publication Date: 01 September 2009 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In stock We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsContents List of Illustrations Preface Introduction: Planetary Call and Response 1. The Green Catholic Imagination: Varieties of Companion Planting 2. Standing Their Ground: From Pioneering Nuns to Bioneering Sisters 3. It Isn't Easy Being Green: Habitat, Habits, and Hybrids 4. Changeless and Changing : Engaged Monasticism in the Ecozoic Era 5. Nourishing the Earthbody: Sacramental Foodways and Culinary Eucharist 6. The Tractor Is My Pulpit : Sacred Agriculture as Priestly Practice 7. Saving Seeds: Heirloom Conservation and Genetic Sanctuaries 8. Stations of the Earth: Body Prayer, Labyrinths, and Other Peripatetic Rituals Conclusion: Stepping into the Future Critical Mass--Earth Ministries in the United States and Canada Notes Acknowledgments IndexReviewsGreen Sisters: A Spiritual Ecology, [is] Sarah McFarland Taylor's extensive look at how several communities of religious women throughout the U.S. have linked the soil with the sacred. In other words, their service to the people of God is rooted in the land they occupy. How deeply the assistant professor in the religion department at Northwestern University in Evanston, Ill., delved into her topic is indicated by the on-site observation, participation and interviews with some of the green sisters, as well as extensive electronic communication with those whose companion planting of religious life and respect for the earth have given another dimension to religious life. Those who ask What is the church doing about the environment? will find a detailed story of faith told with the right balance of the nuns' own words and background provided by the author. Together, they narrate a recent, but important, chapter in U.S. church history. -- Brian Olszewski * Catholic News Service * This book discusses how green sisters are re-in-habiting sustainable practices as an expression of ecological conviction and religious devotion. It is an account of the greening religious vows modeling sustainability, cultivating diversity, conserving the past, and offering sanctuaries of countercultural reverence for the earth. -- R. A. Boisclair * Choice * A fascinating book. -- Stephen Scharper * Toronto Star * In this absorbing and comprehensive study of the greening of religion in Catholic religious communities, Taylor takes the reader on a tour of everything from a biodynamic farm in New Jersey to a community garden in inner-city Detroit that replaced a burned-down crack house...[She] gives a stirring account of how Catholic religious communities long committed to social justice and peace have come to connect with environmental concerns and ecological activism...[Taylor] offers a very helpful critique of agribusiness that monopolizes seed distribution worldwide and of the bioengineering that renders seeds sterile, and she describes the myriad ways in which these sisters are confronting our planetary crisis--from greening their vows to speaking out at a General Electric shareholders meeting. The text may be packed with facts and footnotes, but its author--and the women she quotes--are clearly passionate about their convictions, and sometimes funny...Green Sisters is an academic work of wide-ranging research and scholarship, but it should appeal to any reader who is interested in environmental activism, nature mysticism, social justice, feminism, Catholicism, or monasticism. It makes an important contribution both to contemporary American religious history and to women's religious history. -- Margaret Bullitt-Jonas * Sojourners * This is one of the best books I have read on the lives and work of Catholic nuns in the United States after the Second Vatican Council. The book makes an essential contribution to the history of Catholic social justice and of American nuns. It is an inspiring call to service on behalf of our endangered planet. -- Robert A. Orsi, Warren Professor of American Religious History, Harvard University This is a superb, beautifully written book about Catholic sisters' involvement in the environmental movement. Taylor is not only an expert ethnographer who offers crucial insights into modern American religion, but a wonderful storyteller. -- Catherine A. Brekus, Associate Professor of the History of Christianity, University of Chicago Divinity School What a delightful book! Intelligent, informative, enlightening and engagingly written. A sophisticated treatment of the intellectual issues is combined with a passionate concern for the real world. The result is that very rare academic work which is both true to its subject and genuinely hopeful. -- Roger S. Gottlieb, author of A Greener Faith: Religious Environmentalism and our Planet's Future In this absorbing and comprehensive study of the greening of religion in Catholic religious communities, Taylor takes the reader on a tour of everything from a biodynamic farm in New Jersey to a community garden in inner-city Detroit that replaced a burned-down crack house...[She] gives a stirring account of how Catholic religious communities long committed to social justice and peace have come to connect with environmental concerns and ecological activism...[Taylor] offers a very helpful critique of agribusiness that monopolizes seed distribution worldwide and of the bioengineering that renders seeds sterile, and she describes the myriad ways in which these sisters are confronting our planetary crisis--from greening their vows to speaking out at a General Electric shareholders meeting. The text may be packed with facts and footnotes, but its author--and the women she quotes--are clearly passionate about their convictions, and sometimes funny...Green Sisters is an academic work of wide-ranging research and scholarship, but it should appeal to any reader who is interested in environmental activism, nature mysticism, social justice, feminism, Catholicism, or monasticism. It makes an important contribution both to contemporary American religious history and to women's religious history. -- Margaret Bullitt-Jonas Sojourners A fascinating book. -- Stephen Scharper Toronto Star 20071103 This book discusses how green sisters are re-in-habiting sustainable practices as an expression of ecological conviction and religious devotion. It is an account of the greening religious vows modeling sustainability, cultivating diversity, conserving the past, and offering sanctuaries of countercultural reverence for the earth. -- R. A. Boisclair Choice 20071101 Green Sisters: A Spiritual Ecology, [is] Sarah McFarland Taylor's extensive look at how several communities of religious women throughout the U.S. have linked the soil with the sacred. In other words, their service to the people of God is rooted in the land they occupy. How deeply the assistant professor in the religion department at Northwestern University in Evanston, Ill., delved into her topic is indicated by the on-site observation, participation and interviews with some of the green sisters, as well as extensive electronic communication with those whose companion planting of religious life and respect for the earth have given another dimension to religious life. Those who ask What is the church doing about the environment? will find a detailed story of faith told with the right balance of the nuns' own words and background provided by the author. Together, they narrate a recent, but important, chapter in U.S. church history. -- Brian Olszewski Catholic News Service 20070914 In this absorbing and comprehensive study of the greening of religion in Catholic religious communities, Taylor takes the reader on a tour of everything from a biodynamic farm in New Jersey to a community garden in inner-city Detroit that replaced a burned-down crack house...[She] gives a stirring account of how Catholic religious communities long committed to social justice and peace have come to connect with environmental concerns and ecological activism...[Taylor] offers a very helpful critique of agribusiness that monopolizes seed distribution worldwide and of the bioengineering that renders seeds sterile, and she describes the myriad ways in which these sisters are confronting our planetary crisis--from greening their vows to speaking out at a General Electric shareholders meeting. The text may be packed with facts and footnotes, but its author--and the women she quotes--are clearly passionate about their convictions, and sometimes funny...Green Sisters is an academic work of wide-ranging research and scholarship, but it should appeal to any reader who is interested in environmental activism, nature mysticism, social justice, feminism, Catholicism, or monasticism. It makes an important contribution both to contemporary American religious history and to women's religious history. -- Margaret Bullitt-Jonas Sojourners A fascinating book. -- Stephen Scharper Toronto Star 20071103 This book discusses how green sisters are re-in-habiting sustainable practices as an expression of ecological conviction and religious devotion. It is an account of the greening religious vows modeling sustainability, cultivating diversity, conserving the past, and offering sanctuaries of countercultural reverence for the earth. -- R. A. Boisclair Choice 20071101 Green Sisters: A Spiritual Ecology, [is] Sarah McFarland Taylor's extensive look at how several communities of religious women throughout the U.S. have linked the soil with the sacred. In other words, their service to the people of God is rooted in the land they occupy. How deeply the assistant professor in the religion department at Northwestern University in Evanston, Ill., delved into her topic is indicated by the on-site observation, participation and interviews with some of the green sisters, as well as extensive electronic communication with those whose companion planting of religious life and respect for the earth have given another dimension to religious life. Those who ask What is the church doing about the environment? will find a detailed story of faith told with the right balance of the nuns' own words and background provided by the author. Together, they narrate a recent, but important, chapter in U.S. church history. -- Brian Olszewski Catholic News Service 20070914 What a delightful book! Intelligent, informative, enlightening and engagingly written. A sophisticated treatment of the intellectual issues is combined with a passionate concern for the real world. The result is that very rare academic work which is both true to its subject and genuinely hopeful. -- Roger S. Gottlieb, author of A Greener Faith: Religious Environmentalism and our Planet's Future This is a superb, beautifully written book about Catholic sisters' involvement in the environmental movement. Taylor is not only an expert ethnographer who offers crucial insights into modern American religion, but a wonderful storyteller. -- Catherine A. Brekus, Associate Professor of the History of Christianity, University of Chicago Divinity School This is one of the best books I have read on the lives and work of Catholic nuns in the United States after the Second Vatican Council. The book makes an essential contribution to the history of Catholic social justice and of American nuns. It is an inspiring call to service on behalf of our endangered planet. -- Robert A. Orsi, Warren Professor of American Religious History, Harvard University In this absorbing and comprehensive study of the greening of religion in Catholic religious communities, Taylor takes the reader on a tour of everything from a biodynamic farm in New Jersey to a community garden in inner-city Detroit that replaced a burned-down crack house...[She] gives a stirring account of how Catholic religious communities long committed to social justice and peace have come to connect with environmental concerns and ecological activism...[Taylor] offers a very helpful critique of agribusiness that monopolizes seed distribution worldwide and of the bioengineering that renders seeds sterile, and she describes the myriad ways in which these sisters are confronting our planetary crisis--from greening their vows to speaking out at a General Electric shareholders meeting. The text may be packed with facts and footnotes, but its author--and the women she quotes--are clearly passionate about their convictions, and sometimes funny...Green Sisters is an academic work of wide-ranging research and scholarship, but it should appeal to any reader who is interested in environmental activism, nature mysticism, social justice, feminism, Catholicism, or monasticism. It makes an important contribution both to contemporary American religious history and to women's religious history. -- Margaret Bullitt-Jonas * Sojourners * A fascinating book. -- Stephen Scharper * Toronto Star * This book discusses how green sisters are re-in-habiting sustainable practices as an expression of ecological conviction and religious devotion. It is an account of the greening religious vows modeling sustainability, cultivating diversity, conserving the past, and offering sanctuaries of countercultural reverence for the earth. -- R. A. Boisclair * Choice * Green Sisters: A Spiritual Ecology, [is] Sarah McFarland Taylor's extensive look at how several communities of religious women throughout the U.S. have linked the soil with the sacred. In other words, their service to the people of God is rooted in the land they occupy. How deeply the assistant professor in the religion department at Northwestern University in Evanston, Ill., delved into her topic is indicated by the on-site observation, participation and interviews with some of the green sisters, as well as extensive electronic communication with those whose companion planting of religious life and respect for the earth have given another dimension to religious life. Those who ask What is the church doing about the environment? will find a detailed story of faith told with the right balance of the nuns' own words and background provided by the author. Together, they narrate a recent, but important, chapter in U.S. church history. -- Brian Olszewski * Catholic News Service * Author InformationSarah McFarland Taylor is Associate Professor of Religion at Northwestern University. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |