American Immanence
Theology of, by, and for the planet. Democracy of, by, and for the people.

Hailed by political theorist William E. Connolly as a "necessary read today," Hogue's American Immanence develops a political theology for the Anthropocene rooted in immanental traditions in American philosophy and theology. Fusing process, empiricist, and pragmatist thought with the "left wing of American radical theology," Hogue makes the case for an ecospirituality of resilient democracy. The constructive vision, which philosopher Nancy Frankenberry considers "one of the finest integrations of complex streams of American thought she has read in a long time," offers a spiritually vital, ecologically attuned, emancipatory democratic politics for an age of uncertainty.
