1. Fatherhood, childism, and the creation of society.
- Author
-
Wall J
- Subjects
- Child, Child Care economics, Child Care history, Child Care legislation & jurisprudence, Child Care psychology, Child Guidance economics, Child Guidance education, Child Guidance history, Child Guidance legislation & jurisprudence, Child, Preschool, Family Characteristics ethnology, History, 19th Century, History, 20th Century, Humans, Social Conditions economics, Social Conditions history, Social Conditions legislation & jurisprudence, Child Welfare economics, Child Welfare ethnology, Child Welfare history, Child Welfare legislation & jurisprudence, Child Welfare psychology, Family Health ethnology, Father-Child Relations ethnology, Fathers education, Fathers history, Fathers legislation & jurisprudence, Fathers psychology, Religion history, Social Values ethnology
- Abstract
This essay argues for a new religious ethical approach to fatherhood centered on children and their expanding capabilities for participation in society. Under the notion of "childism"—in analogy to feminism, womanism, humanism, and the like—it takes the perspective of the experiences and concerns of childhood as such. In contrast with a soft patriarchal argument for fatherhood that dominates much religious discourse today, it argues for a larger and more hopeful vision of fatherhood as directed toward the human social good. This requires, methodologically, a richer hermeneutical circle between religion and the social sciences. Substantively, it calls for Christian and other religious ethicists to re-imagine fatherhood as an integrated public–private responsibility that aims to cultivate children’s fully human social creativity as images of their Creator.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
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