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2 - Hermeneutics: Indian Methods – Postcolonial Biblical Hermeneutics

from PART I - Hermeneutics: General Methodological Considerations

C. I. David Joy
Affiliation:
United Theological College in Bangalore
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Summary

Introduction

The search for a hermeneutical paradigm for India in a postcolonial context will have to be understood in the light of the sociocultural, religiopolitical situations of India during the colonial and postcolonial periods. In addition, a study of the hermeneutical patterns of the Bible during both colonial and postcolonial periods may also be desirable. As the Gospel of Mark is situated in the context of the Roman Empire, and the identity of the subalterns and marginalized in the Gospel of Mark is connected with the framework of the Roman colonialism, the study will expose such concerns. Moreover, a search for Indian hermeneutics will necessarily seek the presence of empire in a postcolonial context in many ways. Since the study aims to offer the subalterns in Mark as a hermeneutical model for understanding the engagement of the contextual groups in the process of liberation, an evaluation of Mark and its hermeneuts is necessary. Finally, this chapter will deal with the discourse of postcolonialism with specific reference to its application in the field of biblical hermeneutics.

Missionaries, Religion and Colonialism

In this regard, it is worth noting that there was a nexus between the missionaries and the colonizers during the colonial period. Many explorations of the link between the colonial missions and the local movements underlined the fact that both cultural and political dimensions were focused. However, local realities of indigenous institutions like Vamsha (lineage) and Jati (caste) were not redefined.

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Mark and its Subalterns
A Hermeneutical Paradigm for a Postcolonial Context
, pp. 11 - 32
Publisher: Acumen Publishing
Print publication year: 2008

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