"Artists as Reconcilers" 2006 Conference Recording

1. Introduction by Makoto Fujimura

2. Transgressive vs. Conservative Art

3. Karl Marx's Communist Manifesto

4. Creation and Boundaries

5. Consequences and Transgressive Art

6. Reconciliation in Celebrating Right Boundaries

7. The Prodigal Son

8. Example of Art that Reconciles

9. Artists Standing on the Margins

10. Conclusion: Dancing Before God

NEW!
. . . a great gift for philosophers, theologians, and artists!

"Artists as Reconcilers" 2006 Conference Recording
$15 recommended donation + shipping/handling

SPECIAL: Buy both Miroslav & Turner CDs at a 25% discount!
Click here for more info on the Steve Turner CD
$25 recommended donation + shipping/handling

Speaker: Miroslav Volf
Date Recorded: February 24, 2006

Available now: a 2006 conference recording by Miroslav Volf exploring the role of artists as reconcilers in culture today.

Miroslav Volf, theologian & writer serves as the Director of the Yale Center for Faith & Culture and a Henry B. Wright Professor of Theology at Yale Divinity School. A native of Croatia, he was involved for a decade in international ecumenical dialogues, and has forged a theology of forgiveness and non-violence in the face of unrest experienced in Croatia and Servia in the 1990s. Miroslav focuses on theological understandings of work, the church, the Trinity, violence, reconciliation and memory. His newest book is Free of Charge: Giving and Forgiving in a Culture Stripped of Grace (Zondervan, 2005); he has written more than 70 scholarly articles and hundreds of popular editorials and articles.

IAM's 15th Anniversary Conference, "Artists as Reconcilers" held February 23-25, 2006 in the Cooper Union Great Hall, NYC was a historic event including speakers such as Dana Gioia, poet and Chairman of the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA), Patricia Heaton, and Nancy Pearcey.

All proceeds from the sale of this CD go to support the work of IAM.

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