
In A Modern World Characterized By A Precarious Job Market, Class Inequality, And A Global Migrant Crisis, Natalia Marandiuc Asks The Question: How Does Home Affect One's Identity? In This Wide-ranging Contribution To Christian Theological Anthropology, Marandiuc Argues That Love Attachments Function As Sources Of Subjectivity And Enablers Of Human Freedom. Human Loves And The Love Of God Are Co-creators Of The Self And They Situate Human Subjectivity In A Relational Home. Paradoxically, The Depth Of Human Belonging, Dependence, Is Thus Directly Proportional To The Strength Of Human Agency, Independence. Building Upon Søren Kierkegaard, Research In The Neuroscience Of Attachment Theory, And Contemporary Constructions Of The Self, The Goodness Of Home Makes Original Contributions To Several Central Issues In Contemporary Christian Theological Anthropology. Love Is Understood As Central To The Building Of Subjectivity, Which Is Seen As An Intersection Of Desire And Need. For Marandiuc, The Self Is A Complex Process Of Becoming Rather Than A Static Entity With Essentialist Features. She Looks At Human Difference In Terms Of The Formation Of Particular Subjectivities Through Particular Loves. Ultimately, She Depicts Human Love As Interwoven With The Infinite Streams Of Divine Love, Forming A Sacramental Site For God's Presence, And Playing A Constitutive Role In The Making Of The Self.
How does the concept of home and the nature of human attachment fundamentally shape the formation of individual identity and agency? Natalia Marandiuc, a scholar in Christian theology, investigates the intersection of human relationality and divine love to propose a new framework for understanding subjectivity. By synthesizing Kierkegaardian philosophy with contemporary neuroscience and attachment theory, she argues that human freedom is not diminished by dependence but is instead enabled by the relational structures of love. The text posits that the self is a dynamic process of becoming, situated within a home that is both human and divine.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and theologians identify this work as a sophisticated contribution to contemporary theological anthropology. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which requires familiarity with both philosophical discourse and theological terminology.
Page Count:
240
Publication Date:
2018-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190674512
ISBN-13:
9780190674519
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