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(Re)citing Diaspora as Scriptural Cartographies: Sightings of the Black Atlantic and Story-Telling Difference Before Reading: Scripturalization: Discourse, Formation, Power

Autor A. Francis Carter, Jr.
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 12 oct 2026
What happens when disciplines that study diaspora are inclined to perceive knowledge derived from Black life as anachronism?

How scholars write history and interpret early Christian texts is not neutral; they rehearse cartographies drawn by Enlightenment thinkers who treated linearity as the shape of human progress and the nation-state as its natural container. These inherited cartographies function as unquestioned scriptures that shape how interpreters reconstruct the past and read texts within those historical reconstructions. In this book, New Testament scholar A. Francis Carter Jr. centers diaspora as a prism to explore and intervene in hermeneutical theory. Through contextual readings, Carter exposes a disciplinary predisposition towards anti-Blackness incipient to Diaspora Studies. He then reorients the discourse and maps diaspora's etymological origins and biblical uses through a Black Atlantic cartographic framework - replacing sameness with differentness, linearity with polyvocality, and the erasure of Black life with its recognition as a site from which scripture, history, and diaspora become legible.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781978716148
ISBN-10: 1978716141
Pagini: 256
Ilustrații: 13 bw illus
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 mm
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția T&T Clark
Seria Scripturalization: Discourse, Formation, Power

Locul publicării:New York, United States

Cuprins

Introduction: Diaspora in-Sight
Story-Telling as Interlude: Reclamations (The Chevalier de Saint-Georges)

Part I: Reading Orientations: Enlightened Pre-Texts and Modern Landscapes
1: Hegelian Color-Blindness as Pathology and Cartography: I Don't See Color
(Ever)
2: Pathogens: Root-Language and the Line as a Figure of Structure
3: A Scientific Perspective: Imagination, Rhizome, and (de)Rooting the Objective
Story-Telling as Interlude: Reclamations (Joseph, Anne's Son)

Part II: Pathological Spaces: Diaspora Approaches towards Discipline
4: A Landscape of Diaspora Studies: An Economy of Thought
5: Studying Diaspora before an (un)Disciplined Diaspora Studies: Economic(al)
Stories
6: Diaspora Studies and Story-Telling Roots, Ideally Not African
7: The Practical Grammars of Diaspora Studies: Definitions, Approaches, and Uses
Story-Telling as Interlude: Reclamations (James William Roman)

Part II: Diaspora (re)Sighted: (re)Citations of Black Atlantic Story-Telling
8: Recitations: A Practice of Reading in Black American Discursive Traditions
9: A Generative Story of Diaspora: Contextual Reading as Rhizomic Mapping
10: Heuristic Insights for Diaspora Studies: A Roman View with Preliminary
Framing
11: (re)Sighting Diaspora: (re)Viewing the Archive

Bibliography

Recenzii

This is a substantial and subtle study of the discourse of diaspora from a Black Atlantic perspective that not only resists a rigid and static framework of the nation-state, but also recommends a reorientation of biblical studies in terms of its assumptions and conventions. Readers who are willing to tackle this thick tomb will be rewarded with many thought-provoking information and ideas.
Eschewing the trendiness of ingenuity of exegesis too often marked by faux historicism and misplaced and faulty theologisms, with this book Carter has raised his voice within the small circle of multifield and transdisciplinary theorists of the scriptural. Using segments of the African diaspora as grounding, his pursuit of some basic issues and dynamics that have determined the psycho-logics and politics and orientation of historical and contemporary cultural formation is provocative and intriguing, worth the serious attention of all cultural critics.
Carter's thoughtful and profound re-articulation of the humility involved in proposing new interpretations of truth and objectivity. . .are compelling, thrilling, and even a bit hopeful. The careful differentiation between people, nation, and nation-state is worth the price of admission alone.