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In Empire and Apocalypse Stephen Moore offers us the most complete
introduction yet to the emergent field of postcolonial biblical
criticism. It includes an indispensable in-depth introduction to
postcolonial theory and criticism together with a detailed survey
of postcolonial biblical criticism. Next come three substantial
exegetical chapters on the Gospels of Mark and John and the book of
Revelation, which together demonstrate how postcolonial studies
provide fresh conceptual resources and critical strategies for
rethinking early Christianity's complex relations to the Roman
Empire. Each of these three texts, to different degrees, Moore
argues, mimic and replicate fundamental facets of Roman imperial
ideology even while resisting and eroding it. The book concludes
with an amply annotated bibliography whose main section provides a
comprehensive listing of work done to date in postcolonial biblical
criticism.
Postcolonial studies has recently made significant inroads into
biblical studies, giving rise to numerous conference papers,
articles, essays and books. 'Postcolonial Biblical Criticism' is
the most in-depth and multifaceted introduction to this emerging
field to date. It probes postcolonial biblical criticism from a
number of different but interrelated angles in order to bring it
into as sharp a focus as possible, so that its promise - and
potential pitfalls - can be better appreciated. This volume
carefully positions postcolonial biblical criticism in relation to
other important political and theoretical currents in contemporary
biblical studies: feminism; racial/ethnic studies;
poststructuralism; and Marxism. Alternating between hermeneutical
and exegetical reflection, the essays cumulatively isolate and
evaluate the definitive features of postcolonial biblical
criticism. Such a mapping of postcolonial biblical criticism as a
whole has never before been undertaken in such explicit and
detailed terms. The contributors include Roland Boer, Laura E.
Donaldson, David Jobling, Tat-siong Benny Liew, Stephen D. Moore
and Fernando F. Segovia.
This study guide explores the origins and reception history of the
Book of Revelation and its continuing fascination for readers from
both religious and secular backgrounds. Stephen D. Moore examines
the transcultural impact Revelation has had, both within and beyond
Christianity, not only on imaginings of when and how the world will
end, but also on imaginings of the risen Jesus, heaven and hell,
Satan, the Antichrist, and even Mary the mother of Jesus. Moore
traces Revelation’s remarkable reception through the ages, with
special emphasis on its twentieth and twenty-first century
appropriations, before resituating the book in its original context
of production: Who wrote it, where, when, why, and modelled on
what? The study guide culminates with a miniature commentary on the
entire text of Revelation, weaving together liberationist,
postcolonial, feminist, womanist, queer, and ecological approaches
to the book in order to discern what it might mean for contemporary
readers and communities concerned with issues of social justice.
For this volume, sequel to The Bible in Three Dimensions, the seven
full-time members of the research and teaching faculty in Biblical
Studies at Sheffield-Loveday Alexander, David Clines, Meg Davies,
Philip Davies, Cheryl Exum, Barry Matlock and Stephen Moore-set
themselves a common task: to reflect on what they hope or imagine,
as century gives way to century, will be the key areas of research
in biblical studies, and to paint themselves, however modestly,
into the picture. The volume contains, as well as those seven
principal essays, a 75-page 'intellectual biography' of the
Department and a revealing sketch of the 'material conditions' of
its research and teaching, together with a list of its graduates
and the titles of their theses.
"God's Beauty Parlor" opens the Bible to the contested body of
critical commentary on sex and sexuality known as queer theory and
to masculinity studies. Through a series of dazzling rereadings
staged not only in God's beauty parlor, but also in God's boudoir,
locker room, and war room, the author pursues the themes of
homoeroticism, masculinity, beauty, and violence through such texts
as the Song of Songs, the Gospels, the Letter to the Romans, and
the Book of Revelation.
He ponders such matters as the curious place of the Song of Songs
in the history of sexuality, or how an apparent paean to
male-female love became a pretext for literary cross-dressing for
legions of male Jewish and Christian commentators; Jesus' face and
physique in relation to ideologies of beauty, ranging from the
patristic era, when the "earthly" Jesus was regularly represented
as ugly, to the contemporary global culture industry, with its
trademark equation of looks with worth; the gendered and sexual
substratum of Paul's doctrine of salvation embedded in his most
influential epistle--not least his gendering of righteousness as
masculine and sin as feminine; and the intimate imbrication of
masculinity and mass death in Revelation, a book about war making
men making war-making men . . . some of whom also happen to be
gods.
"God's Beauty Parlor" is an exhilarating attempt to bring some of
the most significant currents in contemporary gender studies to
bear on a text that, even in the post-Christian West, remains the
ultimate cultural icon, cipher, and shibboleth.
"What is the lesson of that other, newly sprung tree (the cross) in
whose bark Mark has carved his Gospel (for this is a book that
bleeds)? Is it that Jesus's body, grafted onto the cross, became
one with it, and thus became tree, branch, book, and leaf,
inscribed with letters of blood, can now at last be read, no longer
an indecipherable code but an open codex? And that in its (now)
re(a)d(able) ink, lately invisible, the message that was scratched
into the fig tree is transcribed: outside the gates, but only just,
the summer Son is shining in full strength?"--Stephen D. Moore In
this book Stephen D. Moore offers a dazzling new reading of the
Gospels of Mark and Luke, applying the poststructuralist techniques
of Derrida, Lacan, and Foucault to illuminate these texts in a way
that no one has done before. Written with wit and a sensitivity to
words--and wordplay--that is reminiscent of Moore's fellow
countryman James Joyce, the book is also deeply learned, impressive
in its detailed knowledge of previous scholarship as well as in the
challenges it presents to that scholarship. Moore argues that
whereas the language of the Gospels is concrete, pictorial, and
often startling, the language of modern gospel scholarship tends to
be propositional and abstract. Calling himself a New
Test-what-is-meant scholar, he approaches the Gospels of Mark and
Luke as though they were pictograms or dreamwork to decipher and
interpret, writing a response that is no less visceral and
immediate than the biblical texts themselves.
Sexual Disorientations brings some of the most recent and
significant works of queer theory into conversation with the
overlapping fields of biblical, theological and religious studies
to explore the deep theological resonances of questions about the
social and cultural construction of time, memory, and futurity.
Apocalyptic, eschatological and apophatic languages, frameworks,
and orientations pervade both queer theorizing and theologizing
about time, affect, history and desire. The volume fosters a more
explicit engagement between theories of queer temporality and
affectivity and religious texts and discourses.
"God's Beauty Parlor" opens the Bible to the contested body of
critical commentary on sex and sexuality known as queer theory and
to masculinity studies. Through a series of dazzling rereadings
staged not only in God's beauty parlor, but also in God's boudoir,
locker room, and war room, the author pursues the themes of
homoeroticism, masculinity, beauty, and violence through such texts
as the Song of Songs, the Gospels, the Letter to the Romans, and
the Book of Revelation.
He ponders such matters as the curious place of the Song of Songs
in the history of sexuality, or how an apparent paean to
male-female love became a pretext for literary cross-dressing for
legions of male Jewish and Christian commentators; Jesus' face and
physique in relation to ideologies of beauty, ranging from the
patristic era, when the "earthly" Jesus was regularly represented
as ugly, to the contemporary global culture industry, with its
trademark equation of looks with worth; the gendered and sexual
substratum of Paul's doctrine of salvation embedded in his most
influential epistle--not least his gendering of righteousness as
masculine and sin as feminine; and the intimate imbrication of
masculinity and mass death in Revelation, a book about war making
men making war-making men . . . some of whom also happen to be
gods.
"God's Beauty Parlor" is an exhilarating attempt to bring some of
the most significant currents in contemporary gender studies to
bear on a text that, even in the post-Christian West, remains the
ultimate cultural icon, cipher, and shibboleth.
This study guide explores the origins and reception history of the
Book of Revelation and its continuing fascination for readers from
both religious and secular backgrounds. Stephen D. Moore examines
the transcultural impact Revelation has had, both within and beyond
Christianity, not only on imaginings of when and how the world will
end, but also on imaginings of the risen Jesus, heaven and hell,
Satan, the Antichrist, and even Mary the mother of Jesus. Moore
traces Revelation's remarkable reception through the ages, with
special emphasis on its twentieth and twenty-first century
appropriations, before resituating the book in its original context
of production: Who wrote it, where, when, why, and modelled on
what? The study guide culminates with a miniature commentary on the
entire text of Revelation, weaving together liberationist,
postcolonial, feminist, womanist, queer, and ecological approaches
to the book in order to discern what it might mean for contemporary
readers and communities concerned with issues of social justice.
Religion, Emotion, Sensation asks what affect theory has to say
about God or gods, religion or religions, scriptures, theologies,
and liturgies. Contributors explore the crossings and
crisscrossings between affect theory and theology and the study of
religion more broadly, as well as the political and social import
of such work. Bringing together affect theorists, theologians,
biblical scholars, and scholars of religion, this volume enacts
creative transdisciplinary interventions in the study of affect and
religion through exploring such topics as biblical literature,
Christology, animism, Rastafarianism, the women’s Mosque
Movement, the unending Korean War, the Sewol ferry disaster, trans
and gender queer identities, YA fiction, queer historiography, the
prison industrial complex, debt and neoliberalism, and death and
poetry. Contributors: Mathew Arthur, Amy Hollywood, Wonhee Anne
Joh, Dong Sung Kim, A. Paige Rawson, Erin Runions, Donovan O.
Schaefer, Gregory J. Seigworth, Max Thornton, Alexis G. Waller
A turn to the animal is underway in the humanities, most obviously
in such fields as philosophy, literary studies, cultural studies,
and religious studies. One important catalyst for this development
has been the remarkable body of animal theory issuing from such
thinkers as Jacques Derrida and Donna Haraway. What might the
resulting interdisciplinary field, commonly termed animality
studies, mean for theology, biblical studies, and other cognate
disciplines? Is it possible to move from animal theory to
creaturely theology?
This volume is the first full-length attempt to grapple centrally
with these questions. It attempts to triangulate philosophical and
theoretical reflections on animality and humanity with theological
reflections on divinity. If the animal human distinction is being
rethought and retheorized as never before, then the animal human
divine distinctions need to be rethought, retheorized, and
retheologized along with it. This is the task that the
multidisciplinary team of theologians, biblical scholars,
philosophers, and historians assembled in this volume collectively
undertakes. They do so frequently with recourse to Derrida's animal
philosophy and also with recourse to an eclectic range of other
relevant thinkers, such as Haraway, Giorgio Agamben, Emmanuel
Levinas, Gloria Anzaldua, Helene Cixous, A. N. Whitehead, and Lynn
White Jr.
The result is a volume that will be essential reading for religious
studies audiences interested in ecological issues, animality
studies, and posthumanism, as well as for animality studies
audiences interested in how constructions of the divine have
informed constructions of the nonhuman animal through history.
Postcolonial theology has recently emerged as a site of intense
intellectual and political energy and has taken its place in the
interdisciplinary field of postcolonial studies. This volume is
animated by the conviction that postcolonial theology is now ready
for a second, deeper phase of engagement with postcolonial theory,
one that moves beyond the general to the specific. No critic has
been more emblematic of the challenging and contested field of
postcolonial theory than Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak. In this
volume, the product of a theological colloquium in which Spivak
herself participated, theologians and biblical scholars engage with
her thought in order to catalyze a diverse range of original
theological and exegetical projects. The volume opens with a
"topography" of postcolonial theology and also includes other
valuable introductory essays. At the center of the collection are
transcriptions of two extended public dialogues with Spivak on
theology and religion in general. A further dozen essays
appropriate Spivak's work for theological and ethical reflection.
The volume is also significant for the larger field of postcolonial
studies in that it is the first to focus centrally on Spivak's
immensely suggestive and vital concept of "planetarity."
Religion, Emotion, Sensation asks what affect theory has to say
about God or gods, religion or religions, scriptures, theologies,
and liturgies. Contributors explore the crossings and
crisscrossings between affect theory and theology and the study of
religion more broadly, as well as the political and social import
of such work. Bringing together affect theorists, theologians,
biblical scholars, and scholars of religion, this volume enacts
creative transdisciplinary interventions in the study of affect and
religion through exploring such topics as biblical literature,
Christology, animism, Rastafarianism, the women's Mosque Movement,
the unending Korean War, the Sewol ferry disaster, trans and gender
queer identities, YA fiction, queer historiography, the prison
industrial complex, debt and neoliberalism, and death and poetry.
Contributors: Mathew Arthur, Amy Hollywood, Wonhee Anne Joh, Dong
Sung Kim, A. Paige Rawson, Erin Runions, Donovan O. Schaefer,
Gregory J. Seigworth, Max Thornton, Alexis G. Waller
A turn to the animal is underway in the humanities, most obviously
in such fields as philosophy, literary studies, cultural studies,
and religious studies. One important catalyst for this development
has been the remarkable body of animal theory issuing from such
thinkers as Jacques Derrida and Donna Haraway. What might the
resulting interdisciplinary field, commonly termed animality
studies, mean for theology, biblical studies, and other cognate
disciplines? Is it possible to move from animal theory to
creaturely theology?
This volume is the first full-length attempt to grapple centrally
with these questions. It attempts to triangulate philosophical and
theoretical reflections on animality and humanity with theological
reflections on divinity. If the animal human distinction is being
rethought and retheorized as never before, then the animal human
divine distinctions need to be rethought, retheorized, and
retheologized along with it. This is the task that the
multidisciplinary team of theologians, biblical scholars,
philosophers, and historians assembled in this volume collectively
undertakes. They do so frequently with recourse to Derrida's animal
philosophy and also with recourse to an eclectic range of other
relevant thinkers, such as Haraway, Giorgio Agamben, Emmanuel
Levinas, Gloria Anzaldua, Helene Cixous, A. N. Whitehead, and Lynn
White Jr.
The result is a volume that will be essential reading for religious
studies audiences interested in ecological issues, animality
studies, and posthumanism, as well as for animality studies
audiences interested in how constructions of the divine have
informed constructions of the nonhuman animal through history.
Postcolonial theology has recently emerged as a site of intense
intellectual and political energy and has taken its place in the
interdisciplinary field of postcolonial studies. This volume is
animated by the conviction that postcolonial theology is now ready
for a second, deeper phase of engagement with postcolonial theory,
one that moves beyond the general to the specific. No critic has
been more emblematic of the challenging and contested field of
postcolonial theory than Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak. In this
volume, the product of a theological colloquium in which Spivak
herself participated, theologians and biblical scholars engage with
her thought in order to catalyze a diverse range of original
theological and exegetical projects. The volume opens with a
"topography" of postcolonial theology and also includes other
valuable introductory essays. At the center of the collection are
transcriptions of two extended public dialogues with Spivak on
theology and religion in general. A further dozen essays
appropriate Spivak's work for theological and ethical reflection.
The volume is also significant for the larger field of postcolonial
studies in that it is the first to focus centrally on Spivak's
immensely suggestive and vital concept of "planetarity."
In Empire and Apocalypse Stephen Moore offers us the most complete
introduction yet to the emergent field of postcolonial biblical
criticism. It includes an indispensable in-depth introduction to
postcolonial theory and criticism together with a detailed survey
of postcolonial biblical criticism. Next come three substantial
exegetical chapters on the Gospels of Mark and John and the Book of
Revelation, which together demonstrate how postcolonial studies
provide fresh conceptual resources and critical strategies for
rethinking early Christianity's complex relations to the Roman
Empire. Each of these three texts, to different degrees, Moore
argues, mimic and replicate fundamental facets of Roman imperial
ideology even while resisting and eroding it. The book concludes
with an amply annotated bibliography whose main section provides a
comprehensive listing of work done to date in postcolonial biblical
criticism.
The impact of Gilles Deleuze on critical thought in the opening
decades of the twenty-first century rivals that of Jacques Derrida
or Michel Foucault on critical thought in the closing decades of
the twentieth. The "Deleuze and..." industry is in overdrive in the
humanities, the social sciences, and beyond, busily connecting
Deleuzian philosophy to everything from literature to architecture,
metaphysics to mathematics, ethics to physics, sexuality to
technology, and ecology to theology. What of Deleuze and the Bible?
What does the Bible become when it is plugged into the Deleuzian
corpus? An immense affective assemblage, among other things. And
what does biblical criticism become in the process? A practice of
close reading that is other than interpretation and renounces the
concept of representation. Not just for those already familiar with
the work of Deleuze, the book begins with an extended introduction
to Deleuzian thought. It then proceeds to unexegetical explorations
of five successive themes: Text (how to make yourself a Bible
without Organs, and why); Body (why there are no bodies in the
Bible, and how to read them anyway); Sex (a thousand tiny sexes, a
trillion tiny Jesuses); Race (Jesus and the white faciality
machine); and Politics (democracy, despots, pandemics, ancient
prophets). Cumulatively, these explorations limn the fluid contours
of a Bible after Deleuze.
What is a "biblical scholar"? Stephen D. Moore and Yvonne Sherwood
provide a thoroughly defamiliarizing and frequently entertaining
re-description of this peculiar academic species and its odd
disciplinary habitat. The modern-and -biblical scholar, they argue,
is a product of the Enlightenment. Even when a biblical scholar
imagines that she is doing something else entirely (something
confessional, theoretical, literary, or even postmodern), she is
sustaining Enlightened modernity and its effects. This study poses
questions for scholars across the humanities concerned with the
question of the religious and the secular. It also poses pressing
questions for scholars and students of biblical interpretation:
What other forms might biblical criticism have taken? What untried
forms might biblical criticism yet take? Contents Adobe Acrobat
Document Preface Adobe Acrobat Document Chapter 1 Adobe Acrobat
Document Samples require Adobe Acrobat Reader Having trouble
downloading and viewing PDF samples? "A lively and readable survey
of the engagement of literary and biblical studies with Theory,
that is, postmodern theories. The authors challenge biblical
scholars to engage Theory to understand our own disciplinary
history, and thereby widen our horizons and free ourselves to be
more broadly intellectually relevant. I encourage biblical scholars
and graduate students to take up the challenge." -Joanna Dewey
Harvey H. Guthrie, Jr. Professor Emerita of Biblical Studies
Episcopal Divinity School, Cambridge, Massachusetts "No one is more
conversant in literary Theory than Moore and Sherwood, who have for
some time been smuggling it into biblical studies in creative ways.
As literary critics become less enamored of the promise of Theory,
Moore and Sherwood see new possibilities for biblical scholars to
move beyond the modernist obsession with 'the Enlightenment Bible'
and engage theorists who are 'getting religion.' Their critique is
sometimes caustic, always right-on; their manifesto points beyond
traditional historical-critical methods, identity politics, and
'contextualization' for its own sake to a new, genuine universality
that may shape the future of our discipline." -Richard Horsley
Distinguished Professor of Liberal Arts and the Study of Religion,
retired University of Massachusetts, Boston "Tongue-in-cheek and
down-to-earth, this manifesto pairs clarity with a personal voice.
A breath of fresh air, it makes everyone interested in being a
"good" biblical scholar sit on edge. Sit tight! It's worth it."
-Mieke Bal Academy Professor Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and
Sciences
Since its publication by Fortress Press in 1992, Mark and Method
has been an invaluable resource for the study of Mark, and of the
range of methods used in interpreting the New Testament. This
second edition offers a new introduction and chapters brought up to
date with the latest developments in interpretation, including new
chapters on Cultural Studies and Post-Colonial Criticism. Contents
Preface to the Second Edition 1. Introduction: The Lives of Mark,
Janice Capel Anderson and Stephen D. Moore 2. Narrative Criticism:
How Does the Story Mean? Elizabeth Struthers Malbon 3.
Reader-Response Criticism: Figuring Mark's Reader, Robert M. Fowler
4. Deconstructive Criticism: Turning Mark Inside Out, Stephen D.
Moore 5. Feminist Criticism: The Dancing Daughter, Janice Capel
Anderson 6. Social Criticism: Crossing Boundaries, David Rhoads 7.
Cultural Studies: Making Mark, Abraham Smith 8. Post-Colonial
Criticism: Echoes of a Subaltern's Contribution and Exclusion,
Benny Liew
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