*COD & Shipping Charges may apply on certain items.
Review final details at checkout.
About The Book
Description
Author(s)
<p>In 2001 Continuum published the extensive collected papers from African Americans and the Bible an interdisciplinary conference held at Union Theological Seminary NYC. In the collection's introduction Vincent L. Wimbush issued a challenge to take seriously those who read darkness and to consider what it is they are doing when they read the Bible as scripture. Wimbush's focus on darkness readers both within and outside of the African diaspora breaks open the discourse around the nature meaning and importance of the Bible. By following the lead of darkness readers the Bible is revealed to be more than a collection of ancient documents from an inaccessible past; it is the site upon which modern contemporary ideological battles have and continue to be waged. <p/>In this book Margaret Aymer takes up his challenge. It is an examination of the way in which Frederick Douglass the nineteenth-century abolitionist used the epistle of James particularly Jas 3:17 in his abolitionist speeches to read the darkness of slavery and slaveholding Christianity. Within the epistle of James is a rhetoric of the world as darkness. Douglass uses this to read his contemporary darkness. As part of her research Aymer has created an index of biblical references in all of Frederick Douglass' abolitionist speeches as collected by J. W. Blassingame (1841-1860).</p>