The practices of radical refusal in biblical feminist interpretation and black study

Verbum et Ecclesia

 
 
Field Value
 
Title The practices of radical refusal in biblical feminist interpretation and black study
 
Creator Mokoena, Lerato L.
 
Subject Theology; Old Testament archive; critical fabulation; biblical feminist interpretation; gender-sensitive frameworks; Saidiya Hartman
Description Gender-specific frameworks detect androcentrism in biblical texts and create a methodology and a reading practice of reading the stories of women not only as by-products of their environments or religious figures but also humanises them through radical forms of storytelling. The method is followed through by recovery and revisionist readings. These modes of interpretation and examination amongst many (i.e. literary, social and historical) aim to retrieve and revive women, their stories, ways of being and living and experiences from the claws of redactional and ideological criticism and conventional theological constructs of meaning, which subsidise their erasure. It is the contention here that cinematic narrative storytelling of women’s stories, experiences and ways of being both in antiquity and contemporary should not be embraced as merely accidental. Literal archives about women’s lives and experiences should be engaged alongside fictional and religious narratives. These narratives are all encompassing as they are observed through the lens of othering as examined through the prism of what Magubane calls ‘social relations, rather than psychological dispositions only’ as determinative factors of how bodies are seen and perceived and not only as rhetorical devices. Therefore, this article sets out to be a reading that traces methodology and integrates critical fabulation as a possibility of engagement from critical race theory into the Old Testament.Intradisciplinary and/or interdisciplinary implications: This article sets to create a discourse between methodologies in Old Testament Theology, biblical feminist ideologies, using critical race theory as interdisciplinary focus, critical fabulation, cinematic narrative analysis as conceptual frameworks in an effort to add to the arsenal of disobedient epistemes.
 
Publisher AOSIS
 
Contributor
Date 2022-03-29
 
Type info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion — African Sensitive Gender Frameworks; Critical Fabulation
Format text/html application/epub+zip text/xml application/pdf
Identifier 10.4102/ve.v43i1.2398
 
Source Verbum et Ecclesia; Vol 43, No 1 (2022); 6 pages 2074-7705 1609-9982
 
Language eng
 
Relation
The following web links (URLs) may trigger a file download or direct you to an alternative webpage to gain access to a publication file format of the published article:

https://verbumetecclesia.org.za/index.php/ve/article/view/2398/5549 https://verbumetecclesia.org.za/index.php/ve/article/view/2398/5550 https://verbumetecclesia.org.za/index.php/ve/article/view/2398/5551 https://verbumetecclesia.org.za/index.php/ve/article/view/2398/5552
 
Coverage Global South Ancient Near East; American Middle Passages; Post Colonial Africa Gender; African Hermeneutics; Critical Race Theory
Rights Copyright (c) 2022 Lerato L. Mokoena https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
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