Sorry, I live with two male theologians, both of whom find 'feminist theology' an insult to the discipline in terms of scholarship, for various reasons, not all of them sheer reactionary fervor. I don't touch the stuff with a ten foot pole, and never will, but so far as I'm concerned, feminist theology "comes in" only after you've gone through some grounding in philosophy, or it becomes a shallow, whiney, separatist endeavor.
But I know Elizabeth Cady Stanton wrote a women's Bible, which is the earliest piece of explicitly feminist 'theology' that I know of. But then, I know very little.
AHHH!
But I know Elizabeth Cady Stanton wrote a women's Bible, which is the earliest piece of explicitly feminist 'theology' that I know of. But then, I know very little.
Dwim