Magers & Quinn Bookseller [home link]
Books Contact Us Contact Us
Books Adavanced Search Help Your Account View Cart  
Search
Title

Author

Keyword

ISBN

 
Advanced Search
Browse Books
Full Category List
Store Information
CEHD Reads
Bulk Services for: Businesses - Educators - Non-profits - Healthcare - Churches
Magers & Quinn Bookseller Blog
Magers & Quinn Monthly Newsletter
Click for Enlarged View
New: $29.99
Pub. price: $44.95
Hardcover
M909

Transforming Scriptures
African American Women Writers and the Bible
New

ISBN: 0820330906 Publisher: Univ of Georgia Pr Published: Feb 1 2010 Pages: 166 Weight: 0.90lbs. Height: 9.00" Width: 6.00" Depth: 0.75" Language: English

Publisher's Comments
Transforming Scriptures is the first sustained treatment of African American women writers’ intellectual, even theological, engagements with the book Northrup Frye referred to as the “great code” of Western civilization. Katherine Clay Bassard looks at poetry, novels, spee...
Continued below >>>

Other Copies
Same ISBN:
$29.99 Hardcover New / Online and In Store
Publisher's Comments (cont.)
Transforming Scriptures is the first sustained treatment of African American women writers’ intellectual, even theological, engagements with the book Northrup Frye referred to as the “great code” of Western civilization. Katherine Clay Bassard looks at poetry, novels, speeches, sermons, and prayers by Maria W. Stewart, Frances Harper, Hannah Crafts, Harriet E. Wilson, Harriet Jacobs, Zora Neale Hurston, Toni Morrison, and Sherley Anne Williams and discusses how such texts respond as a collective “literary witness” to the use of the Bible for purposes of social domination. Black women’s historic encounters with the Bible were, indeed, transformational; in the process of “turning cursing into blessing” these women were both shaped and reshaped by the scriptures they appropriated for their own self-representation.Two important biblical figures emerge as key tropes around which women fashioned a counternarrative to the dominant culture’s “curse” on black female identity: the “talking mule” from Numbers 22 and the “black but comely” Shulamite of Song of Songs, the Queen of Sheba. Transforming Scriptures analyzes these tropes within a range of contexts, from biblical justifications of slavery and the second-class status of women to hermeneutical and post-structural critiques of the Bible. African American women’s appropriations of scripture occur within a continuum of African American Bible-reading practices and religious or ideological commitments, argues Bassard. There is thus no single “black women’s hermeneutic”; rather, theories of African American women and the Bible must account for historical and social change and difference.

Brows Related Subjects
What's New
What's New
Get Updates
Notify me of updates to Transforming Scriptures
What's This?
Buy a Gift Certificate
Magers and Quinn Event Information
The Loft Literary Center
Magers & Quinn Booksellers - 3038 Hennepin Ave. South, Minneapolis, MN 55408 - 612-822-4611
©2008 Magersandquinn.com - Terms of use