Generally regarded as the first written gospel, Mark probably began circulating in this form during the 70s C.E, the hey-days of Flavian Rome. Reading Mark as a representation of a collective identity position, this dissertation primarily studies the various ways in which it related to Roman imperial discourse. Informed by postcolonial theory as well as by the close interconnections between the Bible and European colonialism, moreover, the dissertation approaches this historical question from the presumption that the past—even for scientific biblical scholars—is continuously caught up in the present. A meta-critical analysis of what appears to be a colonial heritage of biblical scholarship is therefore also included. The study thus has a tr...
This dissertation will argue that at an early stage in ecclesiastical history, the tradition's found...
In spite of the virtually unanimous patristic opinion that the evangelist Mark was the interpreter o...
In spite of the virtually unanimous patristic opinion that the evangelist Mark was the interpreter o...
This project offers a postcolonial narrative analysis of Mark 10:1–45. It is argued that Mark 10 ser...
This contribution explores the potential value of a postcolonial approach for teaching Mark’s gospel...
This contribution explores the potential value of a postcolonial approach for teaching Mark’s gospe...
Using postcolonial analysis to account for the Roman Empire’s pervasive presence in and influence on...
Most scholars who read Mark’s Gospel in light of Roman colonization of Palestine in the first centur...
The influence of the great Roman Empire on almost every facet of life in the first century Mediterra...
International audienceThe Gospel of Mark has been intensively studied from multiple angles using man...
CITATION: Punt, J. 2015. Teaching Mark through a postcolonial optic. HTS Teologiese Studies / Theolo...
International audienceThe Gospel of Mark has been intensively studied from multiple angles using man...
International audienceThe Gospel of Mark has been intensively studied from multiple angles using man...
International audienceThe Gospel of Mark has been intensively studied from multiple angles using man...
International audienceThe Gospel of Mark has been intensively studied from multiple angles using man...
This dissertation will argue that at an early stage in ecclesiastical history, the tradition's found...
In spite of the virtually unanimous patristic opinion that the evangelist Mark was the interpreter o...
In spite of the virtually unanimous patristic opinion that the evangelist Mark was the interpreter o...
This project offers a postcolonial narrative analysis of Mark 10:1–45. It is argued that Mark 10 ser...
This contribution explores the potential value of a postcolonial approach for teaching Mark’s gospel...
This contribution explores the potential value of a postcolonial approach for teaching Mark’s gospe...
Using postcolonial analysis to account for the Roman Empire’s pervasive presence in and influence on...
Most scholars who read Mark’s Gospel in light of Roman colonization of Palestine in the first centur...
The influence of the great Roman Empire on almost every facet of life in the first century Mediterra...
International audienceThe Gospel of Mark has been intensively studied from multiple angles using man...
CITATION: Punt, J. 2015. Teaching Mark through a postcolonial optic. HTS Teologiese Studies / Theolo...
International audienceThe Gospel of Mark has been intensively studied from multiple angles using man...
International audienceThe Gospel of Mark has been intensively studied from multiple angles using man...
International audienceThe Gospel of Mark has been intensively studied from multiple angles using man...
International audienceThe Gospel of Mark has been intensively studied from multiple angles using man...
This dissertation will argue that at an early stage in ecclesiastical history, the tradition's found...
In spite of the virtually unanimous patristic opinion that the evangelist Mark was the interpreter o...
In spite of the virtually unanimous patristic opinion that the evangelist Mark was the interpreter o...