Artigo Revisado por pares

The Ability to Judge: Critique and Surprise in Theology, Anthropology, and L’Arche

2019; Routledge; Volume: 86; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1080/00141844.2019.1640261

ISSN

1469-588X

Autores

Patrick McKearney,

Tópico(s)

Religion and Society Interactions

Resumo

What role does judgment play in certain kinds of critical anthropology and theology, and in attempts to bring the two disciplines together? I turn to L'Arche, a network of Christian communities in which people with 'intellectual disabilities' share life with the cognitively able that scholars commend as a critical alternative to our obsession with judging ability as the marker of moral worth. I describe how this evaluative stance on L'Arche failed me in trying to make sense of my own fieldwork on a L'Arche community where care-givers emphasised the abilities of those they supported all the time. By relating the surprising role that a work of theology played in helping me understand the relationship between agency and judgment in this context, I argue that critique offers an unhelpful point of intersection between anthropology and theology. I propose, instead, that we explore the role of surprise in analysis and dialogue.

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