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Joel D. S. Rasmussen is Associate Professor in the Faculty of Theology and Religion at Oxford University and a Fellow of Mansfield College, Oxford. He is the author of Between Irony and Witness: Kierkegaard's Poetics of Faith, Hope, and Love (T&T Clark, 2005); and co-editor of William James and the Transatlantic Conversation: Pragmatism, Pluralism, and Philosophy of Religion (Oxford University Press, 2014) and of Kierkegaard's Journals and Notebooks (Princeton University Press, 2007-).
Judith Wolfe studied literature and philosophy at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem, and first literature and then philosophical theology at Oxford. She has taught in Berlin and Oxford, and is now Senior Lecturer in Theology & the Arts at the University of St Andrews. Her publications include Heidegger's Eschatology: Theological Horizons in Martin Heidegger's Early Work (Oxford University Press, 2013) and Heidegger and Theology (T&T Clark, 2014). Dr Wolfe has edited a number of volumes on C. S. Lewis, and published articles on other themes in eschatology and nineteenth- and twentieth-century European philosophy and literature.
Johannes Zachhuber studied theology in Rostock, Berlin, and Oxford where he earned his DPhil in 1997. Following a time as Assistant and Junior Professor in Berlin, he has taught at the University of Oxford since 2005. He is the Professor of Historical and Systematic Theology and a Fellow of Trinity College, Oxford. He is the author of Theology as Science in Nineteenth-Century Germany: From F. C. Baur to Ernst Troeltsch (Oxford University Press, 2013) and Human Nature in Gregory of Nyssa (Brill, 1999), as well as numerous articles principally in the areas of late ancient Christianity and nineteenth-century theology. |