A Wilderness Zone

A Wilderness Zone by Walter Brueggemann, published by Cascade Books in 2021, explores the connections between scripture and contemporary social issues. This edition, comprising 154 pages, is presented in English and invites readers to consider how biblical narratives can reshape our understanding of current societal dynamics. Brueggemann examines the interplay between specific scripture references and the pressing matters of our time, suggesting that such connections offer a fresh perspective on our collective social life.
In this work, Brueggemann argues that engaging with biblical testimony can challenge prevailing ideologies and encourage a reevaluation of what we perceive as absolute truths. He posits that these interfaces with scripture are not definitive but rather suggestive and impressionistic, allowing for a more nuanced view of social realities. The book addresses themes of religion, biblical studies, and cultural history, aiming to defamiliarize readers from the dominant narratives of democratic capitalism that often shape our understanding of social facts.
Official synopsis Publisher
In these several pieces I have worked to trace out possible interfaces between specific scripture references and matters at the forefront of our common social life. It is my hunch that, almost without fail, such an interface creates a very different angle of vision for any element of our common social life, because it situates such a topic in the context of the biblical narrative that is occupied by the holy agency of God. Such an alternative angle of vision helps to defamiliarize us from our usual discernment according to the master narrative of democratic capitalism that is most widely shared across the spectrum of conservatives and progressives. Because our common angle of vision shared by progressives and conservatives has a very low ceiling of human ultimacy, we (all of us!) easily come to think that our particular reading of social reality is absolute and beyond question, even if dominated by a tacit ideology. It is my bet that an interface with biblical testimony can and will deabsolutize our excessive certitude and permit us to look again at the social “facts” that are in front of us. I do not think and do not suggest that such interfaces with scripture are inevitable; they are rather suggestive, impressionistic, and fleeting, the kind of linkage that is available in the matrix of faith that is not fixed on certitude.
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