This book expands the conversation on moral injury to include a more formal role for society in it. The author utilizes an interdisciplinary practical theology combining liberation theologies and cultural studies to interrogate how dominate ideologies can complicate moral injury reintegration among veterans.
This book expands the conversation on moral injury to include a more formal role for society in it. The author utilizes an interdisciplinary practical theology combining liberation theologies and cultural studies to interrogate how dominate ideologies can complicate moral injury reintegration among veterans.
Joshua T. Morris, Ph.D. is a bivocational scholar-practitioner who serves as a pediatric staff chaplain and also as a chaplain in the United States Army Reserve.
Inhaltsangabe
1. Are We Still Over There? 2. From Disorder to Injury: Mapping the Terrain(s) 3. Hermeneutical Circles and Liberative Praxis 4. The Reification of the Veteran: Kaleidoscopic Lived Experiences 5. The Centrality of Community in Moral Injury Support: Theological and Cultural Studies Analysis 6. Oppositional Forces: Toward a Counterhegemonic Paradigm for Spiritual Care and Counseling Appendix: Note on Research Design
1. Are We Still Over There? 2. From Disorder to Injury: Mapping the Terrain(s) 3. Hermeneutical Circles and Liberative Praxis 4. The Reification of the Veteran: Kaleidoscopic Lived Experiences 5. The Centrality of Community in Moral Injury Support: Theological and Cultural Studies Analysis 6. Oppositional Forces: Toward a Counterhegemonic Paradigm for Spiritual Care and Counseling Appendix: Note on Research Design
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