
Befriending the North Wind
Children, Moral Agency, and the Good Death
$60.34
- Paperback
209 pages
- Release Date
13 November 2023
Summary
The death of a child horrifies. We recoil at its mention. Images of dead or dying children impose themselves on our attention in ways that challenge us to change. Yet the topic of dying children is studiously avoided. When we do take notice, we paint children as victims, innocent of both blame and agency, passive in the face of suffering. Children die secluded in homes and hospitals, allowing society to carry on as though it were not happening.
Befriending the North Wind is a…
Book Details
| ISBN-13: | 9781506481838 |
|---|---|
| ISBN-10: | 1506481833 |
| Author: | Robyn Boeré |
| Publisher: | Augsburg Fortress Publishers |
| Imprint: | Fortress Press,U.S. |
| Format: | Paperback |
| Number of Pages: | 209 |
| Release Date: | 13 November 2023 |
| Weight: | 318g |
| Dimensions: | 229mm x 152mm |
What They're Saying
Critics Review
Weaving insights from philosophy, theology, anthropology, developmental psychology, and pediatrics into a nuanced account of the moral agency of children, Robyn Boeré has authored a book of exceptional wisdom and sensitivity. In paying attention to what dying children actually say and do rather than forcing upon them the rickety bioethical principles of a society that fears death and worships autonomy, Boeré shows what children can teach adults about being interdependent creatures made in God’s image. As a pediatrician and parent, I highly recommend Befriending the North Wind to anyone who cares about the moral and spiritual lives of children. –Brian Volck, MD, MFA, MAT, coauthor of Reclaiming the Body: Christians and the Faithful Use of Modern Medicine and author of Attending Others: A Doctor’s Education in Bodies and Words
I can think of no higher praise for Robyn Boeré’s Befriending the North Wind than to say it is a lovely book, not simply because of the effortlessness with which the author writes about the stories of George McDonald, but also because of the opportunity she affords readers to change the way they see and speak about life and death, not just of children but also of themselves. By drawing on the stories of Jesus and children in the Gospels and Saint Paul’s use of familial metaphors to describe the relationship of the baptized to the triune God, Boeré makes the daring claim that “childness is humanness.” Recognizing the moral agency of children opens the possibility of seeing them not simply as capable of shaping their own living and dying, but as exemplars of dying well. Insofar as the goal of Christian discipleship is to live as a child of God, she concludes, “we should all die as children.” –Joel James Shuman, professor of theology, King’s College, Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania
About The Author
Robyn Boeré
Robyn Boeré is an associate professor at the Faculty of Theology at the University of Oslo. A scholar of moral theology, her research focuses on moral decision-making, medical ethics, and the meaning of the moral life. She was previously an associate lecturer at the University of St. Andrews and a postdoctoral research fellow at the Lonergan Research Institute at the University of Toronto. She lives in Oslo, Norway.
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