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This volume addresses the problematic relationship between
colonialism and the Bible. It does so from the perspective of the
Global South, calling upon voices from Africa and the Middle East,
Asia and the Pacific, and Latin America and the Caribbean. The
contributors address the present state of the problematic
relationship in their respective geopolitical and geographical
contexts. In so doing, they provide sharp analyses of the past, the
present, and the future: historical contexts and trajectories,
contemporary legacies and junctures, and future projects and
strategies. Taken together, the essays provide a rich and expansive
comparative framework across the globe.
This volume addresses the problematic relationship between
colonialism and the Bible. It does so from the perspective of the
Global South, calling upon voices from Africa and the Middle East,
Asia and the Pacific, and Latin America and the Caribbean. The
contributors address the present state of the problematic
relationship in their respective geopolitical and geographical
contexts. In so doing, they provide sharp analyses of the past, the
present, and the future: historical contexts and trajectories,
contemporary legacies and junctures, and future projects and
strategies. Taken together, the essays provide a rich and expansive
comparative framework across the globe.
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Scripture and Resistance (Hardcover)
Jione Havea; Foreword by Collin Cowan; Contributions by Graham J Adams, Rogelio Dario Barolin, Nancy Cardoso Pereira, …
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R2,409
Discovery Miles 24 090
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Resistance against unjust (wicked) cultures and imperial powers is
at the heart of scripture. In many cases, the resistance is waged
against external systems or the misappropriation of scriptural
texts and traditions. In some cases, however, scripture resists
oppressive cultures and powers that it also requires, certifies and
protects. At other times, and in different settings, the minders of
scripture speak against the abusive cultures and power systems that
they inherited and whose benefits they milk. Scripture and
Resistance contains reflections by authors from East and West,
South and North, on resistance and the Christian scriptures around
a rainbow of concerns: the colonial legacies of the Bible; the
people (esp. native and indigenous people) who were subjugated and
minoritized for the sake of the Bible; the courage for resistance
among ordinary and normal people, and the opportunities that arise
from their realities and struggles; the imperializing tendencies
that lurk behind so-called traditional biblical scholarship; the
strategies of and energies in post- and de-colonial criticisms; the
Bible as a profitable product, and a site of struggle; and the
multiple views or perspectives in the Bible about empire and
resistance. In other words, the contributors, as a collective,
affirm that the Bible contains (pun intended) resistance.
This collection of essays, with contributions by many long-term
colleagues and collaborators of R. S. Sugirtharajah, Professor of
Biblical Hermeneutics in the University of Birmingham, is meant to
review, evaluate, celebrate, and honour his many scholarly
contributions. The title of the collection signifies that the
volume focusses not only on how we read socio-political
interventions, but also on how reading can itself be a form of
intervention. This focus on reading and intervention is in many
ways most fitting, as Professor Sugirtharajah's biblical and
theological hermeneutics have indeed been a significant force of
intervention. His work has confronted and challenged many to see
beyond a parochial mainstream, to perceive imperial and colonial
dynamics in the Bible and in biblical studies, and to remain open
to the transformative possibilities of reading from new sites as
well as with new sights.
Mary Ann Tolbert has been a pioneering voice in what we have now
come to call 'interdisciplinary reading' of the Bible. In the early
stages of her career, Tolbert used New Testament parables to push
biblical scholarship beyond the traditional confines of
historical-critical methods. Over the past four decades, she has
made significant contributions to psychoanalytical, narrative,
rhetorical, feminist, and queer readings of the Bible, and has
interrogated the social location of biblical interpreters as well
as the ideological implications of reading and reading
methodologies. Divided into three main sections, this collection of
essays from biblical scholars around the world to honor Tolbert
engage the very issues that have driven and defined Tolbert's
scholarship: reading between the historical and the literary;
reading between biblical authority and social location; and reading
between gender and sexuality. The title of the collection focuses
on an often-used but arguably under-examined term in biblical
studies: 'ideology'. Together, essays in this volume not only
perform ideological criticism of the Bible but also profess the
ideological nature of criticism itself, since-regardless of 'what'
and 'how' one is reading-the act of reading is always already
infused with ideology. By highlighting the work of ideology in
interpretation, this volume ultimately suggests that while ideology
impacts interpretation of meaning, the meaning of ideology itself
also needs to be interpreted.
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Scripture and Resistance (Paperback)
Jione Havea; Foreword by Collin Cowan; Contributions by Graham J Adams, Rogelio Dario Barolin, Nancy Cardoso Pereira, …
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R1,328
Discovery Miles 13 280
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Resistance against unjust (wicked) cultures and imperial powers is
at the heart of scripture. In many cases, the resistance is waged
against external systems or the misappropriation of scriptural
texts and traditions. In some cases, however, scripture resists
oppressive cultures and powers that it also requires, certifies and
protects. At other times, and in different settings, the minders of
scripture speak against the abusive cultures and power systems that
they inherited and whose benefits they milk. Scripture and
Resistance contains reflections by authors from East, West, South,
and North - on resistance and the Christian scriptures regarding a
rainbow of concerns: the colonial legacies of the Bible; the people
(especially native and indigenous people) who were subjugated and
minoritized for the sake of the Bible; the courage for resistance
among ordinary and normal people, and the opportunities that arise
from their realities and struggles; the imperializing tendencies
that lurk behind so-called traditional biblical scholarship; the
strategies of and energies in post- and de-colonial criticisms; the
Bible as a profitable product, and a site of struggle; and the
multiple views or perspectives in the Bible about empire and
resistance. In other words, the contributors, as a collective,
affirm that the Bible contains (pun intended) resistance.
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