Prison Letter Writing as Theology of Presence

German and Indian Perspectives

Authors

  • Trey Palmisano Towson University Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/rosa.v8i3.28341

Keywords:

WWII, Second world war, colonialism, comparative theology, intertextuality, letter writing, linguistics, Nazi Germany, Sikhism

Abstract

This article attempts to identify a meaningful theology through the medium of prison letter writing. While the majority of prison letters coming out of British colonial India and Nazi Germany have been cherished for their historical value, it is argued that the vitality of the letter rests in a reception narrative that moves beyond the Sitz im Leben of its author and places critical emphasis on the connection between the letter’s combined form and content. Prison letter writing is explored through the language of theology as an appropriate interpretative method that conceives of its historical presence as one that occurs within history but is not limited by history. In adopting this tack, the author offers presence as a way of avoiding the complications of a theological nomenclature that threatens to stand outside of history or become too abstract and otherworldly to meet the demands and needs of those for whom the project of prison writing remained transformational. Comparisons in the penal cultures of Germany and India from the twentieth century are explored for the purpose of broadening the conversation.

Author Biography

  • Trey Palmisano, Towson University

    Trey Palmisano is a Rose Winder scholar in the Jewish Studies programme at Towson University, Baltimore Hebrew Institute affiliate. He is a graduate of the Ecumenical Institute of Theology at St Mary’s Seminary and University. His first book, Peace and Violence in the Ethics of Dietrich Bonhoeffer: An Analysis of Method, is forthcoming from Wipf and Stock.

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Published

2015-09-16

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Palmisano, T. (2015). Prison Letter Writing as Theology of Presence: German and Indian Perspectives. Religions of South Asia, 8(3), 263-284. https://doi.org/10.1558/rosa.v8i3.28341