Karl Barth
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Karl Barth

A Life in Conflict
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ISBN-13:
9780198852469
Veröffentl:
2021
Erscheinungsdatum:
25.03.2021
Seiten:
448
Autor:
Christiane Tietz
Gewicht:
849 g
Format:
241x156x35 mm
Sprache:
Deutsch
Beschreibung:

Christiane Tietz studied Mathematics and Protestant Theology in Frankfurt/Main and Tübingen. She worked as assistant of Eberhard Jüngel and did her PhD with him on Dietrich Bonhoeffer. Her PostDoc thesis was on a Christian concept of self-acceptance. She was awarded a Heisenberg Stipend by the German Research Foundation. From 2008 until 2013 she worked as Full Professor for Systematic Theology and Social Ethics at the University of Mainz/Germany. Since 2013 she has been Full Professor for Systematic Theology at the Institute of Hermeneutics and Philosophy of Religion at the University of Zurich/Switzerland. She has been a visiting lecturer or research scholar in Cambridge, Chicago, Heidelberg, Jerusalem, New York, and Princeton. She is a member of the editorial board of numerous journals and book series, and a judge for the Karl Barth-Prize and a member of the Advisory Board of the Karl Barth-Foundation, Basel.


Victoria J. Barnett (Translator) was Director of the Programs on Ethics, Religion, and the Holocaust at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Washington, DC, from 2004 to 2019. She also served as General Editor of the Dietrich Bonhoeffer Works English Edition from 2004 to 2014. She is the author of For the Soul of the People: Protestant Protest under Hitler (Oxford University Press, 1992) and Bystanders: Conscience and Complicity during the Holocaust (Greenwood Press, 1999). She is the translator of several works, including Wolfgang Gerlach, And the Witnesses were Silent and Christiane Tietz, Theologian of Resistance: The Life and Thought of Dietrich Bonhoeffer, and is the author of numerous articles and book chapters.

Christiane Tietz relates Karl Barth's fascinating life in conflict - conflict with the theological mainstream, against National Socialism, and privately, under one roof with his wife and his mistress, in conflict with himself.
  • 1: "I Belong To Basel": 1886-1904

  • Guildmaster, Pastors and Scholars: Barth's Ancestors

  • A Strict Love for Truth and Christian Discipline: His Parents

  • "A Great Great Joy": Childhood and Youth

  • 2: "This Obscure Desire toward a Better Understanding": 1904-1909

  • The Decision to Study Theology

  • Student in Bern

  • Wearing the Colors and Noncombative: In the Zofingia Association

  • "Very Diligent and Quite Capable": Student in Berlin

  • Once More in Bern and Then Tübingen

  • Finally in Marburg

  • His Work for Die Christliche Welt

  • 3: "Stumbling Up the Steps to Calvin's Pulpit": 1909-1911

  • Vicar in Geneva

  • Quite Demanding: The First Confirmation Instruction

  • Theologian in the Congregation

  • "In Such a Dreadfully Pious Environment"

  • A Daughter from a Good Home: The Engagement to Nelly Hoffmann

  • Farewell to Geneva

  • 4: "The Red Pastor": Safenwil, 1911-1921

  • "This System of Employment Must Fall": Workers and Socialists

  • A Theological Friendship: Eduard Thurneysen

  • "The WorldWithout Gods": The First World War

  • "An Open House": Family Life

  • 5: "A Book for Those Who Were Also Concerned": The First Epistle to the Romans, 1919

  • Human Religion and the Divine Word

  • "Like a Bomb on the Playground of the Theologians"

  • "Without Windows to the Kingdom of Heaven": The Tambach Lecture

  • 6: "To Always Work Somewhat Faster": Göttingen 1921-1925

  • From Swiss Pastor to German Professor

  • "Unavoidable Nonsense of the Academic Business"

  • "Almost Like a Buddy": Barth with His Students

  • "Lively Combat": Emanuel Hirsch and Other Colleagues

  • "Stranger from a Neutral Place": Karl Barth and the Germans

  • 7: "Not a Stone Left Standing": The Second Version of the Epistle to the Romans, 1922

  • A Critical Turn

  • The new version of the Epistle to the Romans

  • Critics and Admirers

  • What is Dialectical Theology?

  • Dialectical Traveling Companions: Brunner, Bultmann, Gogarten

  • Fifteen Questions and Sixteen Answers: The Controversy with Harnack

  • 8: "The Need for Thinking Further": Münster 1925-1930

  • A Call and a Momentous Encounter

  • Received with Joy, Departing in Discord

  • In the Tunnel of the Semester

  • Return to Bern?

  • "The Church, the Church, the Church": Encounters with Catholicism

  • Riding, House Music and Travel

  • 9: A Troubled 'Ménage à Trois': Charlotte von Kirschbaum

  • A Long-Guarded Secret

  • "I Never Knew That There Could Be Something Like This"

  • "A Certain Double Life"

  • Three Under One Roof

  • 10: "A Swissman in the Middle of Germany": Bonn 1930-1935
    From the beginning of his career, Swiss theologian Karl Barth (1886-1968) was often in conflict with the spirit of his times. While during the First World War German poets and philosophers became intoxicated by the experience of community and transcendence, Barth fought against all attempts to locate the divine in culture or individual sentiment. This freed him for a deep worldly engagement: he was known as "the red pastor," was the primary author of the founding document of the Confessing Church, the Barmen Theological Declaration, and after 1945 protested the rearmament of the Federal Republic of Germany. Christiane Tietz compellingly explores the interactions between Barth's personal and political biography and his theology. Numerous newly-available documents offer insight into the lesser-known sides of Barth such as his long-term three-way relationship with his wife Nelly and his colleague Charlotte von Kirschbaum. This is an evocative portrait of a theologian who described himself as "God's cheerful partisan," who was honored as a prophet and a genial spirit, was feared as a critic, and shaped the theology of an entire century as no other thinker.

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