Join Books.org — it's free

Book cover of Living on the Boundaries: Evangelical Women, Feminism and the Theological Academy
Evangelicalism, Women & Religion, Pastoral Ministry - General & Miscellaneous, Feminism & Feminist Theory, Women & Christianity

Living on the Boundaries: Evangelical Women, Feminism and the Theological Academy

by Nicola Hoggard Creegan, Christine D. Pohl
Available on Bookshop Write a review

Books.org participates in affiliate programs including Bookshop.org and the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program. We may earn a commission from qualifying purchases made through links on this page, at no additional cost to you.

Log in to track your reading progress.

Overview

"Both evangelicalism and feminism are controversial movements that provoke complex loyalties and ambivalence within the church and the world at large. In spite of a considerable degree of shared history, they are quite often defined against each other. Most of the rhetoric from and about the movements assumes that there are few connections and little overlap, and that individuals might locate themselves within one or the other, but not within both. Yet some evangelical women in the academy find themselves living on the boundary between feminism and evangelicalism, or on the boundaries between the multiple forms of both feminism and evangelicalism."—from the first chapter

What happens when evangelicalism meets feminism?

In their own biblical and theological training, Nicola Creegan and Christine Pohl have each lived at the intersection of these two movements They now both teach in Christian institutions of higher education where others follow along a similar pathway. They have a story to tell about their experience along with those of ninety other women they surveyed who have lived on the boundary between evangelicalism and feminism. They explore what it was like for evangelical women who pursued doctorates in biblical and theological studies. What were their experiences as they taught and wrote, were mentored and became mentors? What are the theological issues they faced, and how did they respond? How have they negotiated professional, family and church commitments? This well-informed, multidimensional and sensitive narrative of women's experience will be illuminating for anyone involved in the academic theological world.

About the Author, Nicola Hoggard Creegan

Nicola Hoggard Creegan (M.Phil., Ph.D., Drew University) is lecturer in theology at the Bible College of New Zealand in Auckland, New Zealand.

Christine D. Pohl (Ph.D., Emory University) is professor of social ethics at Asbury Theological Seminary in Wilmore, Kentucky.

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Log in to write one.

Editorials

Richard J. Mouw

"By not listening with care to the insights of women who take both evangelical identity and feminist concerns seriously, we evangelicals have not only caused much pain—we have failed to face some important theological challenges. This wonderful book is not only a legitimate plea for healing; it also points the way to new levels of theological integrity."

Mary Stewart Van Leeuwen

"If you have Manichean tendencies—as many traditional evangelicals and mainstream feminists equally do—you will not like this book, since there are no clear villains, heroes or heroines in Living on the Boundaries. Instead we have been given a perceptive look, both empirically and theoretically grounded, at the challenging yet fruitful space inhabited by the first generation of evangelical feminists to study and pursue vocations in the theological academy. The result is an astute, timely and compassionate analysis that remains passionately Christian."

Cynthia S. W. Crysdale

"Living on the Boundaries is a fascinating combination of women's experience and sound research. The authors have gathered together a plethora of stories from women who have at one time or another understood themselves to be'evangelicals' but who also have done doctoral work in theology. This group, by definition, challenges many of the unwritten or explicit assumptions about women's voices in the church and their authority to teach. Pohl and Creegan not only do a fine job of relaying the variegated narrative, they do it in a balanced and nuanced way. Finally, they add to their astute analysis of these stories a careful scholarly discussion of the theological and ecclesiological issues involved in the current evangelical world and its response to women today. They have tapped into an important but neglected slice of the contemporary Christian world in North America."

John R. Franke

"Christine Pohl and Nicola Hoggard Creegan have drawn back the curtain on the unique struggles and complex challenges faced by evangelical women in the academy. In so doing they have raised some of the most pressing questions for the future of evangelical theology and education as it relates to the church and contemporary culture. Thoroughly researched and engagingly written, this is one of the most significant books of the year and should be read carefully by all who are concerned with the future of evangelical life, thought and witness."

Margaret Bendroth

"Being smart, evangelical and female can be a tricky combination, but the wise and passionate women described in this book demonstrate the creative potential of life pursued outside the established pathways of today's academic and religious worlds. Pohl and Creegan's sensitive yet often unsparing accounts of women's experience in evangelical seminaries is essential reading for administrators, teachers and church leaders—and any smart evangelical female who is thinking about going on to graduate school."

Library Journal

Creegan (theology, Bible Coll. of New Zealand) and Pohl (social ethics, Asbury Theological Seminary) have cowritten a groundbreaking and crucial book on a neglected or little-known subject: the intersection of evangelical religion, feminism, and academic life. Living the apparent contradictions of conservative theology and feminist ideas in the context of the university involves what the authors rightly call a "protean self." They conclude with several practical observations and difficult questions about the future of evangelical feminism. Highly recommended. Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

Book Details

Published
November 1, 2005
Publisher
InterVarsity Press
Pages
204
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780830826650

Similar books