Jesus Beyond Nationalism : Constructing The Historical Jesus In A Period Of Cultural Complexity
رقم التسجيلة | 4709 |
نوع المادة | book |
ردمك | 9781845534110 |
رقم الطلب |
BT303.2.J4552 |
العنوان | Jesus Beyond Nationalism : Constructing The Historical Jesus In A Period Of Cultural Complexity |
بيانات النشر | Sheffield, UK: Equinox, 2009. |
الوصف المادي | 179 P ; viii, 179 p. ; 25 cm |
بيان السلسلة | BibleWorld |
ملاحظات |
Includes bibliographical references and index. |
المحتويات / النص |
- Chapter 1: What is cultural complexity? / Thomas Hylland Eriksen - Chapte 2: What is it to write a biography of Jesus? : Schleiermacher's "Life of Jesus" and nineteenth-century nationalism / Halvor Moxnes - Chapter 3: Dostoevsky and the Russian Christ / Peter Normann Waage - Chapter 4:Albert Schweitzer's apocalyptic Jesus and the end of modernity / Ward Blanton - Chapter 5: Beyond nationalism : Jesus the "holy anarchist"? : the cynic Jesus as eternal recurrence of the repressed / Leif E. Vaage - Chapter 6: Jesus as battleground in a period of cultural complexity / William E. Arnal - Chapter 7: Jesus the Jew since 1967 / James G. Crossley - Chapter 8: Jesus in modern Muslim thought : from anti-colonial polemics to post-colonial dialogue? / Oddbjّrn Leirvik. |
المستخلص |
The link between historical Jesus studies and the broader cultural contexts has been largely lost in contemporary scholarship, with the heritage of the Jesus scholarship from the nineteenth century being detached from its cultural context and with the history of Jesus scholarship being buried as a topic in the development of methods and issues in New Testament studies. As a result most presentations of the historical Jesus are historiographically and hermeneutically naive, assuming an objective posture, with little or no reflection on their ideological presuppositions. Therefore, consciously or unconsciously, they often represent hegemonic positions. This collection of essays starts from a different position, by questioning the use of presentations of Jesus to defend and protect hegemonic or mono-cultural contexts, and thereby explicitly or implicitly favour a development towards a more inclusive society for persons from different ethnic, racial, national, gender and sexual orientation backgrounds. This collection of essays will look at the cultural and ideological beginnings of historical Jesus studies in the nineteenth century and expose the underlying presuppositions of hegemony in contemporary presentations of Jesus, viewed from the perspective of cultural complexity. |
المواضيع | Jesus Christ - Historicity - CongressesJesus Christ - Biography - History and criticism - CongressesChristianity and culture - History - Congresses |
الأسماء المرتبطة | Moxnes, Halvor |
LDR | 00115cam a22002053a 4500 |
020 | |a 9781845534110 |
050 | |a BT303.2.J4552 |
245 | |a Jesus Beyond Nationalism : Constructing The Historical Jesus In A Period Of Cultural Complexity |
260 | |a Sheffield, UK |b Equinox, |c 2009 |
300 | |a 179 P.: |b viii, 179 p. ; 25 cm |
490 | |a BibleWorld |
500 | |a Includes bibliographical references and index. |
505 | |a - Chapter 1: What is cultural complexity? / Thomas Hylland Eriksen - Chapte 2: What is it to write a biography of Jesus? : Schleiermacher's "Life of Jesus" and nineteenth-century nationalism / Halvor Moxnes - Chapter 3: Dostoevsky and the Russian Christ / Peter Normann Waage - Chapter 4:Albert Schweitzer's apocalyptic Jesus and the end of modernity / Ward Blanton - Chapter 5: Beyond nationalism : Jesus the "holy anarchist"? : the cynic Jesus as eternal recurrence of the repressed / Leif E. Vaage - Chapter 6: Jesus as battleground in a period of cultural complexity / William E. Arnal - Chapter 7: Jesus the Jew since 1967 / James G. Crossley - Chapter 8: Jesus in modern Muslim thought : from anti-colonial polemics to post-colonial dialogue? / Oddbjّrn Leirvik. |
520 | |a The link between historical Jesus studies and the broader cultural contexts has been largely lost in contemporary scholarship, with the heritage of the Jesus scholarship from the nineteenth century being detached from its cultural context and with the history of Jesus scholarship being buried as a topic in the development of methods and issues in New Testament studies. As a result most presentations of the historical Jesus are historiographically and hermeneutically naive, assuming an objective posture, with little or no reflection on their ideological presuppositions. Therefore, consciously or unconsciously, they often represent hegemonic positions. This collection of essays starts from a different position, by questioning the use of presentations of Jesus to defend and protect hegemonic or mono-cultural contexts, and thereby explicitly or implicitly favour a development towards a more inclusive society for persons from different ethnic, racial, national, gender and sexual orientation backgrounds. This collection of essays will look at the cultural and ideological beginnings of historical Jesus studies in the nineteenth century and expose the underlying presuppositions of hegemony in contemporary presentations of Jesus, viewed from the perspective of cultural complexity. |
650 | |a Christianity and culture - History - Congresses |
650 | |a Jesus Christ - Biography - History and criticism - Congresses |
650 | |a Jesus Christ - Historicity - Congresses |
700 | |a Moxnes, Halvor |e edt |
910 | |a libsys:recno,4709 |
العنوان | الوصف | النص |
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