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Introducing Ordinary African Readers' Hermeneutics: A Case Study of the Agikuyu Encounter with the Bible New edition


Introducing Ordinary African Readers' Hermeneutics: A Case Study of the Agikuyu Encounter with the Bible New edition

Paperback by Kinyua, Johnson

Introducing Ordinary African Readers' Hermeneutics: A Case Study of the Agikuyu Encounter with the Bible

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ISBN:
9783034302890
Publication Date:
6 Jun 2011
Edition/language:
New edition / English
Publisher:
Peter Lang AG, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften
Pages:
14 pages
Format:
Paperback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 24 - 26 May 2024
Introducing Ordinary African Readers' Hermeneutics: A Case Study of the Agikuyu Encounter with the Bible

Description

This book introduces the concept «ordinary African readers' hermeneutics» in a study of the reception of the Bible in postcolonial Africa. It looks beyond the scholarly and official church-based material to the way in which the Bible, and discourses on or from the Bible, are utilized within a wide range of diverse contexts. The author shows that «ordinary readers» can and did engage in meaningful and liberating hermeneutics. Using the Agikuyu's encounter with the Bible as an example, he demonstrates that what colonial discourses commonly circulated about Africans were not always the «truth», but mere «representations» that were hardly able to fix African identities, as they were often characterized by certain ambivalences, anxieties and contradictions. The hybridized Biblical texts, readings and interpretations generated through retrieval and incorporation of the defunct pre-colonial past created interstices that became sites for assimilation, questioning and resistance. The book explores how Africans employed «allusion» as a valid method of interpretation, showing how the critical principle of interpretation lies not in the Bible itself, but in the community of readers willing to cultivate dialogical imagination in order to articulate their vision. The author proposes an African hermeneutical theory, which involves the fusion of both the «scholarly» and the «ordinary» readers in the task of biblical interpretation within a specific socio-cultural context.

Contents

Contents: Biblical Hermeneutics and Postcolonial Theory - Bible and Colonial Identities: Colonial Constructions, Representations and Marginality - Location of Culture in the Colonial Hermeneutics: Ambivalence, Mimicry, and Hybridity - Bible Translation and the Discourse of Colonalism: The Gikuyu Bible - The Role of Common Sense Hermeneutics: The Translated Texts and the Types of Reading - Resistance as a Discursive Practice - The Discourse of Resistance and the «Hidden Transcript»: The Revival Option - Towards an Ordinary African Readers' Hermeneutics.

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