A Decolonial (Re)turn to Class in South African Biblical Scholarship

Q2 Arts and Humanities Old Testament essays Pub Date : 2021-11-18 DOI:10.17159/2312-3621/2020/v34n2a13
G. West
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

South African Black Theology of the 1960-1980s characterised its primary site of struggle as the racial capitalism of apartheid. Intersecting race and/as class has been a distinctively South African contribution to African biblical scholarship. Less common, but equally significant, is the intersection of culture and/as class. This article analyses this trajectory, reflecting on how three South African biblical scholars (Gunther Wittenberg, Makhosazana Nzimande and Hulisani Ramantswana) have discerned the need for the African decolonial project to recognise and recover the class divisions within a culture. A recurring cultural trope across the three scholars is their use of proverbs to discern class distinctions within culture. The works of each of these three scholars and their dialogue partners in South African Contextual Theology and South African Black Theology are interrogated for how they intersect notions of class and culture.
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南非圣经学术的非殖民化(再)转向课堂
1960- 80年代的南非黑人神学将其斗争的主要场所描述为种族隔离的种族资本主义。种族和阶级的交叉是南非对非洲圣经研究的独特贡献。不太常见,但同样重要的是,文化和/或阶级的交集。本文分析了这一轨迹,反思了三位南非圣经学者(Gunther Wittenberg, Makhosazana Nzimande和Hulisani Ramantswana)是如何认识到非洲非殖民化项目需要认识和恢复文化中的阶级划分的。这三位学者反复出现的文化比喻是他们使用谚语来辨别文化中的阶级差异。这三位学者和他们在南非语境神学和南非黑人神学中的对话伙伴的作品都被问及他们是如何交叉阶级和文化概念的。
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来源期刊
Old Testament essays
Old Testament essays Arts and Humanities-Religious Studies
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
9
审稿时长
12 weeks
期刊介绍: Old Testament Essays functions as a vehicle which publishes Old Testament research from various points of view. Its primary aim is to regulate and propagate the study of the Old Testament in Africa. Various fields related to the study of the Old Testament are covered: philological / linguistic studies, historical critical studies, archaeological studies, socio-historical studies, literary studies and rhetorical studies.
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