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Rage and Resistance
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17 November 2006

On December 6, 1989, a man armed with a semi-automatic rifle entered an engineering school in Montreal and murdered fourteen women before killing himself. Responses to what has come to be known as “The Montreal Massacre” varied, from the initial shock and mourning and efforts to “make sense” of the tragedy to an outpouring of writing, art, conferences, and political lobbying. Rage and Resistance: A Theological Reflection on the Montreal Massacre examines, from a theological perspective, how the massacre was “taken up” by the media, experts, politicians, and a variety of individuals and groups.
A practical exercise in Canadian contextual theology, Rage and Resistance analyzes responses to a tragic historical event by engaging with the work of theologian Gregory Baum and sociologist Dorothy Smith. Baum articulates the theological imperative to address the context in which our lives are embedded, calling for critical social analysis in order to understand, and possibly convert, social evil; Smith takes the standpoint of women as a determinate position from which society may be known.
If one of the tasks of theology is to articulate and clarify the struggles in which we are engaged—to name our reality, both the forces that oppress and the possibilities for resistance and healing—this book takes on that task by focusing on an event indelibly etched into the minds of many Canadians. It analyzes some of the artistic, memorializing, and activist responses as manifestations of a spirituality of resistance and urges ever greater resistance to violence against women.
Table of Contents for Rage and Resistance: A Theological Reflection on the Montreal Massacre by Theresa O’Donovan
Preface
Introduction: Roughing It in the Bush
1. Mapping a Way Through
Gregory Baum
Theology and Sociology
Baum’s “Three Theses on Contextual Theology”
Dorothy Smith
Gregory Baum and Dorothy Smith
2. How Does It Happen to Us as It Does?
A Line of Fault
Problematic: The Organization of Power
Backdrop: A Struggle over Meaning
The Social Construction of Knowledge: The Media Presentation
An Alternative Discourse
Articulation to the Social Problem Apparatus: Official Responses
The Tenth Anniversary and Beyond
3. The Stubborn Particulars of Grace
Naming
Interruption
Choice
4. What Shall We Tell Our Bright and Shining Daughters?
Recurring Elements
A Spirituality of Resistance
The Road Out
Conclusion: Look Again
Here is needing to go on.
Here is a strategic theology.
Here is a question: Whence change?
Here is back again.
Appendix
Writing against Forgetting
Five Lines
What I Know
Factsheet: Violence against Women and Girls
Notes
Selected Bibliography
Index