If Creation Is a Gift

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State University of New York Press, Feb 13, 2009 - Religion - 198 pages
What if our world were considered a gift? Extending postmodern gift theory to ecological and ecotheological concerns, Mark Manolopoulos explores how "creation"—the what-is—can be seen as a gift. Creation, when viewed in a radically egalitarian way, is the matrix of all material things—human, otherwise-than-human, or humanly manufactured. Utilizing and critiquing the work of Jacques Derrida and Jean-Luc Marion, Manolopoulos argues that the gift is an irresolvable paradox marked by the contradictory elements of excess (gratuity, linearity) and exchange (gratitude, return). Philosophical and theological reflections on the gift become entangled in its paradoxical tension, but ultimately both aspects must be respected and reflected. When it comes to the creation-gift, we should vacillate between responses like letting-be, enjoyment, utility, and return. Elegantly written and thought-provoking, If Creation Is a Gift both contributes to the ongoing debate on the gift and provides a fresh philosophical and theological consideration of the environmental crisis.
 

Contents

What If?
1
1 CreationGiftAporia
9
2 3A Brief History of Gifts
31
3 Unwrapping Marions Gift
63
4 Oscillation
89
5 Toward an Oscillational EcoEthos
107
After Thought
147
NOTES
149
BIBLIOGRAPHY
173
INDEX
183
Copyright

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About the author (2009)

Mark Manolopoulos is Honorary Research Associate with Monash University's Centre for Studies in Religion and Theology.

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