Paul's identity in Galatians : a postcolonial appraisal / Roji T. George.
Material type:
- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9789351481539
- 9351481530
- 227.406 23
- BS2685.52.G36 2016 15813
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Oriental Theological Seminary | Non-fiction | BS2685.52.G36 2016 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 15813 | |||
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Oriental Theological Seminary | Non-fiction | BS2685.52.G36 2016 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 16217 |
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BS2655.W5 K44 1992 KEE Paul, women & wives : marriage and women's ministry in the letters of Paul / | BS2657 .B3 1947 BAR The letters of Paul... | BS2675 .M6 1946 MOR The Corinthian letters of Paul, an exposition of I and II Corinthians, | BS2685.52.G36 2016 Paul's identity in Galatians : a postcolonial appraisal / | BS2685.52.G36 2016 Paul's identity in Galatians : a postcolonial appraisal / | BT705.E43 2019 Embracing childhood-embodying childness : relocating children in church and society / | BV639.C4 D35 DAL Welcome the child : a child advocacy guide for churches / |
Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
In this book, George rejects articulating an essentialised identity of Paul in Hellenistic or Jewish background as done through the Christian centuries by Paul's interpreters. With his lucid, precise, and cogent argumentation, George articulates Paul's postcolonial identity in non-essentialist, transcultural hybrid, and `impure' terms. He argues that the apostle occupied a cultural-political interstitial space between the Jewish, Hellenistic, and Roman cultures from where he spoke in `forked tongue' subverting, simultaneously, all the three cultures. Borrowing cultural-political tools of literary praxis from the literary critics like Said, Spivak, and Bhabha, an exegetical study of Paul's letter to the Galatians is undertaken in the context of the first century Galatia. It enables unraveling Paul's strategic imagination in a postcolonial hybrid context. It is argued that his self-representation and the community identity formation within the christological-ekklesial space subvert competing power discourses emanating from the colonial `centre' and `margins,' at the same time. For Paul, it is in Christ, the `Third space,' that one is emancipated from all oppressive binaries. This book is sure to interest every serious student of Paul and his theology who wishes to hear multiple meanings of Paul's utterances in the then colonial context subverting dominant power discourses, seeks relevance of his writings in the present cultural-political world, and is interested in reading his writings from multiple interpretive ventage points like Postcolonialism. -- !c From publisher's description.
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