The Bible and the Third World: Precolonial, Colonial and Postcolonial Encounters

by R. S. Sugirtharajah

2001

Publication

Cambridge University Press (2001), Paperback, 316 pages

Collection

Call number

Th-E6-1607

Status

Available

Call number

Th-E6-1607

Description

This innovative study moves briskly but comprehensively through three phases of the Third World's encounter with the Bible - precolonial, colonial, and postcolonial. It recounts the remarkable story of how an inaccessible and marginal book in the ancient churches of India, China and North Africa became an important tool in the hands of both coloniser and colonised; how it has been reclaimed in the postcolonial world; and how it is now being reread by various indigenes, Native Americans, dalits and women. Drawing on substantial exegetical examples, Sugirtharajah examines reading practices ranging from the vernacular to liberation and the newly-emerging postcolonial criticism. His study emphasises the often overlooked biblical reflections of people such as Equiano and Ramabai as well as better-known contemporaries like Gutie?rrez and Tamez. Partly historical and partly hermeneutical, the volume will serve as an invaluable introduction to the Bible in the Third World for students and interested general readers.… (more)

Language

ISBN

0521005248 / 9780521005241
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