Submitted to Program Units |
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1: Augustine and Augustinianisms Unit |
Abstract for Online Program Book (maximum 150 words)
Slavery was ubiquitous in late Antique Rome, and the concept of slavery profoundly shaped Augustine’s theological, ethical, philosophical, and political thought. Recent work in Augustine studies has begun to explore these topics critically analyzing Augustine’s account of slavery and its role in his broader ethics and politics, exploring slavery’s central but often disavowed role in the Augustinian tradition of political thought, while also pressing toward constructive alternatives in conversation with the resources of Black Studies. Given Augustine’s importance to the history of slavery and the role of the Augustinian tradition in the development of modern logics of racialization, there is ample opportunity for further work on Augustine, slavery, and race. This panel brings together three papers with different approaches to the topic.
Papers
- A Comparison of Slavery, Institutions of Violence, and the Categorization of Christian Identity in Augustine and Lactantius.
- Pilgrim Alterity and 'Forma Servi' Christology: Assessing Augustine’s Slave Christology in relation to the Pereginatio Motif
- Two Confessions: Scripture and Moral Agency in Augustine’s and Nat Turner’s Confessions