Discourses of empire : the gospel of Mark from a postcolonial perspective / Hans Leander
Material type:![Text](/opac-tmpl/lib/famfamfam/BK.png)
Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Monografía | Biblioteca Diocesana de Córdoba BDC-San Juan Pablo II | BDJP 226.3 LEA dis (Browse shelf) | Available | 900062112 |
Revision of author's thesis (doctoral)--University of Gothenburg, 2011.
Incluye referencias bibliograficas (pp. 323-370) e índices.
Contiene: Postcolonial theory -- Postcolonial criticism in biblical studies -- Modern biblical studies and empire -- The Semitic and the Greek (1:1) -- Between man and brute (5:1-20) -- Submissive heathen and superior Greek (7:24-30) -- The embarrassing parousia (8:31-9:1) -- "Only absolutely spiritual" (11:1-11) -- An Irish cat among the pigeons (12:13-17) -- The centurion between East and West (15:39) -- Conclusion: Mark and European colonialism -- Mark begins to circulate -- An oppositional beginning (1:1) -- Imperial satire (5:1-20) -- Entering a narrative crisis (7:24-30) -- The parousia as pharmakon (8:31-9:1) -- With Bhabha at the Jerusalem city gates (11:1-22) -- The emperor breaks the surface (12:13-17) -- The secrecy complex as a third space (15:39) -- How Mark destabilizes empire -- Different Marks in different empires.
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