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This Strange Story
Stacy Nicole Davis
其他書名
Jewish and Christian Interpretation of the Curse of Canaan from Antiquity to 1865
出版
University Press of America
, 2008
主題
Literary Criticism / Jewish
Religion / General
Religion / Biblical Criticism & Interpretation / Old Testament
Religion / Biblical Criticism & Interpretation / New Testament
Religion / Biblical Studies / History & Culture
Religion / Reference
ISBN
0761838791
9780761838791
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=734QAQAAIAAJ&hl=&source=gbs_api
註釋
This book addresses the claim that an American antebellum era anti-African reading of "the curse of Canaan" story originated in rabbinic literature. By tracing the curse of Canaan's history of interpretation from the beginning of the Common Era to 1865, with particular emphasis on the neglected medieval period, this work examines this long-held false claim. Although Jewish readings of the curse of Canaan appear in medieval Christian commentaries, no Jewish references to skin color are repeated in Christian exegesis. Therefore, the book argues that the anti-African antebellum reading develops in response both to abolitionism and the biblical text's establishment of a social hierarchy that divides humankind into slaves and masters. The pro-slavery reading is an extension of Christian allegorical exegesis of the curse of Canaan, in which Shem, Ham, and Japheth represented different groups of people depending upon the interpreter's historical context, usually Jewish Christians, Jews or Christian heretics, and Gentile Christians respectively. Southerners and their allies simply changed the typology, making Shem the ancestor of brown people, Ham the ancestor of black people due to a reading of his genealogy in Genesis 10, and Japheth the ancestor of white people. The new typology justified African slavery as a divinely ordained and sanctioned economic system, just as the old typology justified Christian supersessionism. Book jacket.