Dr Simone Kotva (@thisnonhumanity) 's Twitter Profile
Dr Simone Kotva

@thisnonhumanity

Research Fellow in Theology at the University of Oslo. Author of Effort and Grace tinyurl.com/yc86gzlf. Mysticism, ecology & Christian spirituality.

ID: 1204163317893341190

linkhttps://www.tf.uio.no/english/people/aca/sakotva/index.html calendar_today09-12-2019 22:18:35

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Dr Simone Kotva (@thisnonhumanity) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Toward a folklore theology: I've translated some remarkable Cypriana from Norway and am delighted to be able to share them with you! Now available from Hadean Press for the price of a coffee:

Tim Howles (@aimetim) 's Twitter Profile Photo

"Nonhuman Witnessing: War, Data, and Ecology after the End of the World" Michael Richardson dukeupress.edu/nonhuman-witne…

"Nonhuman Witnessing: War, Data, and Ecology after the End of the World"  
Michael Richardson dukeupress.edu/nonhuman-witne…
Alyssa Maldonado-Estrada (@emoprofessor) 's Twitter Profile Photo

I’m excited to share my new piece “Touching Lourdes: Collection & Tactile Pedagogy.” I reflect on using religious objects in the classroom, touch as research method, & the pleasures & obsessions of collecting #DevotionalStuff collectingreligion.wordpress.com/2024/08/19/tou…

I’m excited to share my new piece “Touching Lourdes: Collection & Tactile Pedagogy.” I reflect on using religious objects in the classroom, touch as research method, & the pleasures & obsessions of collecting #DevotionalStuff 
collectingreligion.wordpress.com/2024/08/19/tou…
Dr Hannah Lucas (@hannahalucas) 's Twitter Profile Photo

My forthcoming book with Columbia Univ Press, 'Impossible Recovery: Julian of Norwich and the Phenomenology of Well-Being', now has a webpage and an exciting blurb! Available to preorder, published January 2025 🎉 cup.columbia.edu/book/impossibl…

Dr Katie Cross 🍉 (@drkatiecross) 's Twitter Profile Photo

What are your favourite examples of theological themes in pop culture? Could be music, film, tv, anything at all... Crowdsourcing ideas for a lecture I'm giving later this term. Would love to hear yours! 🎶🍿📺

American Weil Society (@weilsociety) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Simone Weil died on August 24, 1943 aged just 34 years. 81 years after her death, there is a renaissance in Weil scholarship ongoing. Watch this space for more events soon!

American Weil Society (@weilsociety) 's Twitter Profile Photo

It is with great sadness that we share the news of the passing of E. Jane Doering, a member of our community for over 30 years and an influential and artful scholar of Simone Weil's thought.

It is with great sadness that we share the news of the passing of E. Jane Doering, a member of our community for over 30 years and an influential and artful scholar of Simone Weil's thought.
King-Ho Leung (@kingholeung) 's Twitter Profile Photo

David Bentley Hart’s new book, ‘All Things Are Full of Gods’, a 500+ page Socratic dialogue, is out today: 27th August—Hegel’s birthday. Is this a coincidence or signifying the completion of the system of German idealism?

David Bentley Hart’s new book, ‘All Things Are Full of Gods’, a 500+ page Socratic dialogue, is out today: 27th August—Hegel’s birthday.

Is this a coincidence or signifying the completion of the system of German idealism?
Dr Simone Kotva (@thisnonhumanity) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Shout out to Douglas Christie's new **on-line** course on Christian mysticism, IN SEARCH OF A WAY. This looks like a fabulous program: crs.lmu.edu/programs/way/#…

Adam Robbert (@ae_robbert) 's Twitter Profile Photo

"We tend, said Weil, to think about attention as something one does in order to achieve a goal, when in fact any philosopher will tell you that they arrived at their greatest discoveries not when they were exerting themselves to the utmost but when they were no longer trying and

samdubbelman (@samdubbelman) 's Twitter Profile Photo

My lecture notes from today's class discussion of "what is mysticism," drawing heavily from Louis Nelstrop's encyclopedia entry on "mysticism" in the Vocabulary for the Study of Religion.

My lecture notes from today's class discussion of "what is mysticism," drawing heavily from Louis Nelstrop's encyclopedia entry on "mysticism" in the Vocabulary for the Study of Religion.
Dr Simone Kotva (@thisnonhumanity) 's Twitter Profile Photo

I am continually fascinated by the postmortem cancelling of Weil. Most attempts rest on what seem wilful misreadings of paradox as contradiction. Paradox -- esp. Weil's way of welding it -- is *really* hard to do well and even harder to parse adequately. Cf. Blanchot on Weil.

Sarah E. Dees (@sarahedees) 's Twitter Profile Photo

As the academic study of religion was developing in the late 19th c, European and Euro-American Protestant scholars constructed hierarchies with Indigenous religions at the bottom. One of the ways they justified this was the purported lack of ethics among Indigenous traditions.

As the academic study of religion was developing in the late 19th c, European and Euro-American Protestant scholars constructed hierarchies with Indigenous religions at the bottom. One of the ways they justified this was the purported lack of ethics among Indigenous traditions.