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Onesimus Our Brother: Reading Religion, Race, and Culture in Philemon: Paul in Critical Contexts

Editat de Matthew V. Johnson, James A. Noel, Demetrius K. Williams
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 30 iun 2012

Philemon is the shortest letter in the Pauline collection, yetbecause it has to do with a slave separated from his masterit has played an inordinate role in the toxic brew of slavery and racism in the United States. In Onesimus Our Brother, leading African American biblical scholars tease out the often unconscious assumptions about religion, race, and culture that permeate contemporary interpretation of the New Testament and of Paul in particular. The editors argue that Philemon is as important a letter from an African American perspective as Romans or Galatians have proven to be in Eurocentric interpretation. The essays gathered here continue to trouble scholarly waters, interacting with the legacies of Hegel, Freud, Habermas, Ricoeur, and James C. Scott, as well as the historical experience of African American communities.

Contributors include the editors and Mitzi J. Smith, Margaret B. Wilkerson, James W. Perkinson, and Allen Dwight Callahan.

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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780800663414
ISBN-10: 0800663411
Pagini: 175
Dimensiuni: 157 x 231 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.43 kg
Editura: Fortress Press
Seria Paul in Critical Contexts


Notă biografică

Matthew V. Johnson is senior pastor of the Good Shepherd Church (Baptist), Atlanta, Georgia.


Descriere

Noel and Johnson make the point that Philemon is as important a letter from an African-American perspective as Romans or Galatians have proven to be in Eurocentric interpretation. Here they gather critical essays by a constellation of African-American scholars, highlighting the latest in interpretive methods and troubling scholarly waters, interact