Exploring Postcolonial Biblical Criticism: History, Method, PracticeISBN: 978-1-4051-5856-5
Hardcover
224 pages
May 2011, Wiley-Blackwell
Other Available Formats: Paperback
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“This book is brilliantly presented with appropriate biblical texts and hermeneutical insights.” (Theology, 1 May 2012)
"The book is written by the foremost scholar in this discipline, with an added chapter by, presumably, one of his students to reinforce the point." (Church Times, 21 October 2011)"R. S. Sugirtharajah has not only been the inaugurator of postcolonial biblical criticism but also its most prolific practitioner. His latest book may well turn out to be his most important: a textbook introduction to the field that is eminently accessible to novices, yet so expansive, challenging and profound that old hands will also learn enormously from it."
—Stephen D. Moore, Professor of New Testament Studies, The Theological School, Drew University
"Sugi is at it again—he has put before his readers another
well-written, compellingly-argued, fascinating and challenging
read. Anyone interested in critical biblical studies—biblical
studies that analyzes its own operations and agenda in a fraught
postcolonial situation--in the early twenty-first century will need
to take Sugirtharajah’s work very seriously. This book is
from my point of view the new starting point for debates and
conversations and proposals about postcolonial biblical
criticism--and beyond--in the decade ahead."
—Vincent L Wimbush, Institute for Signifying
Scriptures, Claremont Graduate University