Decolonizing God: the Bible in the Tides of Empire
Mark G. Brett
Sheffield Phoenix Press, 2008 - 237 pages
For
centuries, the Bible has been used by colonial powers to undergird
their imperial designs--an ironic situation when so much of the Bible
was conceived by way of resistance to empires. In this thoughtful book,
Mark Brett draws upon his experience of the colonial heritage in
Australia to identify a remarkable range of areas where God needs to be
decolonized--freed from the bonds of the colonial. Writing in a context
where landmark legal cases have ruled that Indigenous (Aboriginal)
rights have been 'washed away by the tide of history', Brett re-examines
land rights in the biblical traditions, Deuteronomy's genocidal
imagination, and other key topics in both the Hebrew Bible and the New
Testament where the effects of colonialism can be traced. Drawing out
the implications for theology and ethics, this book provides a
comprehensive new proposal for addressing the legacies of colonialism. A
ground-breaking work of scholarship that makes a major intervention
into post-colonial studies. This book confirms the relevance of
post-colonial theory to biblical scholarship and provides an exciting
and original approach to biblical interpretation. Bill Ashcroft,
University of Hong Kong and University of New South Wales; author of The
Empire Writes Back: Theory and Practice in Post-Colonial Literatures
(2002). Acutely sensitive to the historical as well as theological
complexity of the Bible, Mark Brett's Decolonizing God brilliantly
demonstrates the value of a critical assessment of the Bible as a tool
for rethinking contemporary possibilities. The contribution of this book
to ethical and theological discourse in a global perspective and to a
politics of hope is immense.
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