Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q16842243> ?p ?o }
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- Q16842243 subject Q14087835.
- Q16842243 subject Q3919876.
- Q16842243 subject Q5312304.
- Q16842243 subject Q7076854.
- Q16842243 subject Q8225349.
- Q16842243 subject Q8302506.
- Q16842243 subject Q8763960.
- Q16842243 subject Q8948305.
- Q16842243 abstract "Delores S. Williams is a theologian notable for her formative role in the development of womanist theology and best known for her book Sisters in the Wilderness. Her writings over the years have discussed the role intersecting oppressions of race, gender, and class have played in the situation of black women. As opposed to feminist theology as it was predominately practiced by white women and black liberation theology as predominately practiced by black men, Williams argues that black women's oppression deepens the analysis of oppression in theology. In Sisters in the Wilderness, Williams' primarily develops a rereading of the biblical figure, Hagar, to illuminate the importance of issues of reproduction and surrogacy in black women's oppression. According to Aaron McEmrys, "Williams offers a theological response to the defilement of black women.... Womanism is an approach to ethics, theology and life rooted in the experiences of African-American women". The term "Womanism" was coined by a contemporary of Williams, Alice Walker, used in her 1979 short story "Coming Apart" and again in her 1983 essay collection In Search of Our Mothers Gardens. Williams wrote the eighth chapter of Transforming the Faiths of our Fathers: Women who Changed American Religion (2004), edited by Ann Braude.".
- Q16842243 wikiPageWikiLink Q14087835.
- Q16842243 wikiPageWikiLink Q1414964.
- Q16842243 wikiPageWikiLink Q16017900.
- Q16842243 wikiPageWikiLink Q17001463.
- Q16842243 wikiPageWikiLink Q183403.
- Q16842243 wikiPageWikiLink Q214617.
- Q16842243 wikiPageWikiLink Q215868.
- Q16842243 wikiPageWikiLink Q2420841.
- Q16842243 wikiPageWikiLink Q3555513.
- Q16842243 wikiPageWikiLink Q3919876.
- Q16842243 wikiPageWikiLink Q4973800.
- Q16842243 wikiPageWikiLink Q5312304.
- Q16842243 wikiPageWikiLink Q7076854.
- Q16842243 wikiPageWikiLink Q7252.
- Q16842243 wikiPageWikiLink Q8225349.
- Q16842243 wikiPageWikiLink Q8302506.
- Q16842243 wikiPageWikiLink Q8461.
- Q16842243 wikiPageWikiLink Q8763960.
- Q16842243 wikiPageWikiLink Q8948305.
- Q16842243 wikiPageWikiLink Q9181.
- Q16842243 comment "Delores S. Williams is a theologian notable for her formative role in the development of womanist theology and best known for her book Sisters in the Wilderness. Her writings over the years have discussed the role intersecting oppressions of race, gender, and class have played in the situation of black women.".
- Q16842243 label "Delores S. Williams".