Ethnicity and inclusion : religion, race, and whiteness in constructions of Jewish and Christian identities / David G. Horrell. [print]
Material type: TextPublication details: Grand Rapids, Michigan : William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, (c)2020.Description: xxiii, 424 pages ; 24 cmContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9780802876089
- BS2545.H816.E846 2020
- BS2545
- COPYRIGHT NOT covered - Click this link to request copyright permission:
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Circulating Book (checkout times vary with patron status) | G. Allen Fleece Library CIRCULATING COLLECTION | BS2545.H816.E846 2020 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 31923002050264 |
Browsing G. Allen Fleece Library shelves, Shelving location: CIRCULATING COLLECTION Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
BS2545.H63S37 1984 The New Testament and homosexuality : contextual background for contemporary debate / | BS2545.H64D47 2009 The hope of glory : honor discourse and New Testament interpretation / | BS2545.H66S77 1993 The hospitality commands : building loving Christian community : building bridges and neighbors / | BS2545.H816.E846 2020 Ethnicity and inclusion : religion, race, and whiteness in constructions of Jewish and Christian identities / | BS2545.J4W35 1996 Jesus and the Holy City : New Testament perspectives on Jerusalem / | BS2545.J44A58 1993 Anti-semitism and early Christianity : issues of polemic and faith / | BS2545.J44B38 2004 Jude and the relatives of Jesus in the early church / |
A persistent structural dichotomy: Jewish ethnic particularism and Christian inclusivism -- Ethnicity, race, and ancient Jewish and Christian identities: themes in recent research -- Ethnicity, race, and religion in social-scientific perspective -- Shared descent: ancestry, kinship, marriage, and family -- A common way of life: culture, practice, and the socialization of children -- Homeland: territory and symbolic constructions of space -- becoming a people: self-consciousness and ethnicization -- Mission and conversion: joining the people -- Implicit whiteness and Christian superiority: the epistemological challenge.
Some of today's problematic ideologies of racial and religious difference can be traced back to constructions of the relationship between Judaism and early Christianity. New Testament studies, which developed contemporaneously with Europe's colonial expansion and racial ideologies, is, David Horrell argues, therefore an important site at which to probe critically these ideological constructions and their contemporary implications. In Ethnicity and Inclusion, Horrell explores the ways in which "ethnic" (and "religious") characteristics feature in key Jewish and early Christian texts, challenging the widely accepted dichotomy between a Judaism that is ethnically defined and a Christianity that is open and inclusive. Then, through an engagement with whiteness studies, he offers a critique of the implicit whiteness and Christianness that continue to dominate New Testament studies today, arguing that a diversity of embodied perspectives is epistemologically necessary.
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