Reading Hebrews and 1 Peter with the African American Great Migration: Diaspora, Place and Identity

Reading Hebrews and 1 Peter with the African American Great Migration: Diaspora, Place and Identity

by Jennifer T. Kaalund
Reading Hebrews and 1 Peter with the African American Great Migration: Diaspora, Place and Identity

Reading Hebrews and 1 Peter with the African American Great Migration: Diaspora, Place and Identity

by Jennifer T. Kaalund

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Overview

Kaalund examines the constructed and contested Christian-Jewish identities in Hebrews and 1 Peter through the lens of the “New Negro,” a diasporic identity similarly constructed and contested during the Great Migration in the early 20th century. Like the identity “Christian,” the New Negro emerged in a context marked by instability, creativity, and the need for a sense of permanence in a hostile political environment.

Upon examination, both identities also show complex internal diversity and debate that disrupts any simple articulation as purely resistant (or accommodating) to its hegemonic and oppressive environment. Kaalund's investigation into the construction of the New Negro highlights this multiplicity and contends that the rhetoric of place, race, and gender were integral to these processes of inventing a way of being in the world that was seemingly not reliant on one's physical space. Putting these issues into dialogue with 1 Peter and Hebrews allows for a reading of the formation of Christian identity as similarly engaging the rhetoric of place and race in constructive and contested ways.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780567685223
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Publication date: 11/29/2018
Series: The Library of New Testament Studies
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 176
File size: 350 KB

About the Author

Jennifer T. Kaalund is Assistant Professor of Religious Studies at Iona College, USA.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Chapter 1: Diaspora Space, Displaced Identities, and Diasporic Religion
Part I: Models of Ethno-Spatial Reasoning
2. Chapter 2: A Place to Call Home: The Great Migration and the Making of the New Negro
3. Chapter 3: Called Out: Alexandrian Jewish Identity in the Roman Imperial Context
Part II: A New Negro Hermeneutic

4. Chapter 4: A Better Country: Hebrews and an Identity Formerly Known as Jewish
5. Chapter 5: A Peculiar People: 1 Peter and an Identity that will Come to be Known as Christian
Conclusion
6. Chapter 6: Called Out: Rethinking Centers and Margins
Bibliography
Index
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