Human Just Like Me: A Grounded Theory of Disrupting Dehumanization through Table Fellowship

Pub Date : 2023-05-11 DOI:10.1177/00916471231170648
K. Douglass, Lucy Israel, Laura Shigeta, Kate Underwood
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Abstract

This qualitative study proposes a grounded theory of Christian identity transformation based on the experiences of 100 undergraduate college students (in-group), reported in reflection papers, who attended a free community dinner with their neighbors who were experiencing housing insecurity or homelessness (out-group). The grounded theory that emerged from student reflection papers is that the experience of eating with an out-group in a setting that disrupts in-group/out-group social dynamics, within the context of Christian community and utilizing an action-reflection model of learning, leads to humanizing theological insights that disrupt previously held stereotypes of the out-group. Jack Mezirow’s theory of disorienting dilemmas as provoking adult learning is used to explain the transformative impact of the dinner. Extended attention is given to the theological significance of in-group/out-group boundary crossing as it relates to Karl Barth’s theological anthropology of mutuality as well as Delores Williams’ understanding of sin as invisibilization.
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像我一样的人:通过餐桌团契破坏非人性化的基础理论
这一定性研究提出了一个基于反思论文中报告的100名本科大学生(内组)的经验的基督教身份转变的基础理论,他们与经历住房不安全或无家可归的邻居(外组)一起参加了免费的社区晚宴。从学生反思论文中出现的基础理论是,在基督教社区的背景下,利用行动-反思学习模型,在破坏群体内/群体外社会动态的环境中与外群体一起吃饭的经历,导致了人性化的神学见解,破坏了之前对外群体的刻板印象。杰克·梅齐罗(Jack Mezirow)关于困惑困境激发成人学习的理论被用来解释那次晚餐的变革性影响。我们将进一步关注群体内/群体外边界跨越的神学意义,因为它与卡尔·巴特(Karl Barth)关于相互性的神学人类学以及德洛丽丝·威廉姆斯(Delores Williams)对罪作为隐形的理解有关。
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