The Bones Reassemble: Reconstituting Liturgical Speech Philosophical and Cultural Studies in Religion Published by The Davies Group Purchase from Amazon ![]() Contents Preface Chapter One: The Power to Contain Chapter Two: The Synaptic Gospels: Speculations on Liturgy and Cognition Chapter Three: “A Good Mouth-Filling Oath”: Early Modern Style Chapter Four: Liturgy Terminable and Interminable Chapter Five: Putting the Id Back in Liturgy Notes Bibliography Index Reviews “In The Bones Reassemble, Catherine Madsen has given us…a rigorous and daring inquiry into the state of contemporary theology – specifically, the ways in which our denominations and faith communities speak of and therefore think of God.… None of us who is engaged in the formal or informal study of religion can afford to ignore this provocative book. She has transformed the discipline.” — Neil Gillman, The Jewish Theological Seminary of America “[…] Madsen’s probing and provocative work draws from sources in esthetics, psychology and neuroscience to argue that liturgical language must not fear metaphor; must not fear trauma; must reach into “the recesses of feeling,” and the dramatic heights of emotion and need; must work with the body. The Bones Reassemble, like active liturgy itself, will be worth reading and re-reading for its fullness.” — Alicia Ostriker, Rutgers University |