Wounded Futures: Missiology, Post-Apartheid Literature, and the Quest for Humanity 2.0
Wounded Futures: Missiology, Post-Apartheid Literature, and the Quest for Humanity 2.0
Author(s): Bogdan ANDREISubject(s): Theology and Religion, Religion and science , Sociology of Religion
Published by: Dialogo Publishing House SRL
Keywords: decoloniality; hybridity; memory; missiology; reconciliation; trauma;
Summary/Abstract: This paper delves into the relationship between post-apartheid literature, theology, and missiology in combating the persistent legacies of trauma, injustice, and dehumanization in a postcolonial world. Through the lens of literary works, such as J.M. Coetzee's Disgrace, Antjie Krog's Country of My Skull, and Zakes Mda's Ways of Dying, and the theological explorations into suffering, hope, and reconciliation, it explores how powerfully the narratives that are about the individuals' emotional injuries and their resistance can guide a prophetic, decolonial missiology. In it, humanities are challenged to provide an empirical Christian mission for our times that is through, among others, the inclusiveness of the part, mournful attitude, and local agency, and at the same time, it needs to be attentive to the complicated involvements of memory, hybridity, and technological mediation. In the final account, the author demands that the human be reconceptualized and move out beyond Western humanism, thus centring around embodied, communal and technologically mediated futures that are responsive to justice, dignity, and collective transformation.
Journal: Dialogo
- Issue Year: 11/2025
- Issue No: 2
- Page Range: 340-350
- Page Count: 11
- Language: English
