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Evangelical Postcolonial Conversations
Paperback
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Colonialism involves more than just territorial domination. It also creates cultural space that silences and disenfranchises those who do not hold power. This process of subjugation continues today in various forms of neocolonialism, such as globalization. Postcolonialism arose in the latter half of the twentieth century to challenge the problem of coloniality at the level of our language and our actions (praxis). Postcolonialism seeks to disrupt forms of domination and empower the marginalized to be agents of transformation.
In 2010, the Postcolonial Roundtable gathered at Gordon College to initiate a new conversation regarding the significance of postcolonial discourse for evangelicalism. The present volume is the fruit of that discussion. Addressing themes like nationalism, mission, Christology, catholicity and shalom, these groundbreaking essays explore new possibilities for evangelical thought, identity and practice. The contributors demonstrate the resources for postcolonial criticism within the evangelical tradition, as well as the need to subject evangelical thought to an ever-new critique to prevent the formation of new centers of domination. Evangelical Postcolonial Conversations models the kind of open dialogue that the church needs in order to respond appropriately to the pressing concerns of the world today.
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Why Postcolonial Conversations Matter
Reflection on Postcolonial Friendship
Brian D. McLaren
The Importance of Postcolonial Evangelical Conversations
Steve Hu
A Responseto the Postcolonial Roundtable: Promises, Problems and Prospects
Gene L. Green
The Postcolonial Challenge to Evangelicals
Editors
Prospects and Problems for Evangelical Postcolonialisms
Robert S. Heaney
Part 1 Mission and Metanarrative: Origins and Articulations
Introduction to Part 1- L. Daniel Hawk
1. From Good: "The Only Good Indian Is a Dead Indian"; to Better: "Kill the Indian and Save the Man"; to Best: "Old Things Pass Away and All Things Become White!" An American Hermeneutic of Colonization
L. Daniel Hawk and Richard L. Twiss
2. North American Mission and Motive: Following the Markers
Gregory L. Cuéllar and Randy S. Woodley
3. Postcolonial Feminism, the Bible and the Native Indian Women
Jayachitra Lalitha
4. Converting a Colonialist Christ: Toward an African Postcolonial Christology
Victor Ifeanyi Ezigbo and Reggie L. Williams
Part 2 The Stories behind the Colonial Stories
Introduction to Part 2 - Kay Higuera Smith
5. Tracing the Metanarrative of Colonialism and Its Legacy
Teri R. Merrick
6. American Exceptionalism as Prophetic Nationalism
Kurt Anders Richardson
Part 3 Revisioning Evangelical Theology
Introduction to Part 3 - Jayachitra Lalitha
7. The Apocalypse of Colonialism: Notes Toward a Postcolonial Eschatology
Christian T. Collins Winn and Amos Yong
8. Jesus/Christ the Hybrid: Toward a Postcolonial Evangelical Christology
Joya Colon-Berezin and Peter Goodwin Heltzel
9. Recovering the Spirit of Pentecost: Canon and Catholicity in Postcolonial Perspective
Megan K. DeFranza and John R. Franke
Part 4 Transforming the Evangelical Legacy
Introduction to Part 4 - Kay Higuera Smith
10. The Problem and Promise of Praxis in Postcolonial Criticism
Federico A. Roth and Gilberto Lozano
11. Embracing the Other: A Vision for Evangelical Identity
Kay Higuera Smith
12. Healthy Leadership and Power Differences in the Postcolonial Community: Two Reflections
Nicholas Rowe and Ray Aldred
13. Christian Disciplines as Ways of Instilling God?s Shalom for Postcolonial Communities: Two Reflections
Nicholas Rowe and Safwat A. Marzouk
Part 5 Closing the Circle
Introduction to Part 5: The Evolution of the Postcolonial Roundtable
Joseph F. Duggan
14. Hosting a True Roundtable: Dialogue Across Theological and Postcolonial Divides
Judith Oleson
Benediction
Gregory W. Carmer
Dr. Richard Twiss: A Remembrance
Randy S. Woodley
Contributors' Biographies
Name and Subject Index
Scripture Index