![]() ![]() Interview with Steed Davidson of McCormick Theological Seminary and author of Empire and Exile: Postcolonial Readings of the Book of Jeremiah (T&T Clark, 2011) and a book in preparation, Postcolonial Biblical Criticism: A Guide to the Perplexed. Ville (New York: Columbia University Press, 2006), 48-70.Įpisode 5: Steed Davidson on Postcolonial Studies and Biblical Interpretation This episode connects with his “The Garden of Eden and the Heterosexual Contract,” in Bodily Citations, ed. In this interview, Ken Stone of Chicago Theological Seminary and author of Practicing Safer Texts (2005) describes how he came to destabilize the heteronormative Biblical creation stories through using the theories of Monique Wittig and Judith Butler. The interview connects with her “Womanist Reading of the Song of Songs in the Age of AIDS,” in Brenner-Idan and Yee (eds.), The Five Scrolls (Bloomsbury, 2018), 89-102.Įpisode 4: Ken Stone on Queer Interpretation and Biblical Creation Texts Professor Cheryl Anderson of Garrett-Evangelical Seminary and author of Ancient Laws and Contemporary Controversies: The Need for Inclusive Biblical Interpretation (Oxford, 2009) discusses how she rereads the Song of Songs in light of the HIV/AIDS crisis impacting communities of color. The episode builds on Newsom’s classic 1989 article “Women and the Discourse of Patriarchal Wisdom: A Study of Proverbs 1–9,” in Day (ed.), Gender and Difference in Ancient Israel. Fortress, 1989.Įpisode 3: Cheryl Anderson Interview on Womanist Interpretation, Song of Songs and HIV/AIDS In this episode, Carol Newsom, Professor of Old Testament at Emory University and former President of the Society of Biblical Literature discuss feminist interpretation and biblical wisdom, with a focus on Proverbs 8. The episode builds on Newsom’s 1996 article “ Bakhtin, the Bible and Dialogic Truth.” Journal of Religion 76 (1996):290-306.Įpisode 2: Carol Newsom on Feminist Interpretation, Wisdom and Proverbs 8 Its multiple viewpoints capture diverse sides of issues better than a single system would. In this episode, Carol Newsom, Professor of Old Testament at Emory University and former President of the Society of Biblical Literature explains how she came to the idea that the Bible’s truth is best perceived as ‘dialogical’. Subscribe wherever you listen to podcasts or listen below.Įpisode 1: Carol Newsom on the Bible and Dialogic Truth Background music was performed by David Carr, Robin Smith, and Peter Ronick, including “JB Shuffle” (Jeremy Baum), “Cissy Strut” (The Meters). The interviews offer background and build on articles that illustrate diverse new ways to read and interpret the Hebrew Bible. This podcast originated as interviews to accompany an Introduction to the Hebrew Bible/Old Testament at Union Theological Seminary (using D.Carr, The Hebrew Bible: A Contemporary Introduction to the Christian Old Testament and Jewish Tanakh ). Subscribe on: Apple | Google | Stitcher | Podbeanĭavid Carr is a Professor of Hebrew Bible at Union Theological Seminary and his new podcast, The Bible, Let’s Read it Differently, features interviews with leading scholars advancing new methods for engaging the Bible academically. ![]()
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