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Jesus in an Age of TerrorScholarly Projects for a New American Century James G. Crossley
Description This book applies the work of Noam Chomsky, Edward Herman, Edward Said and several others on international politics and the supportive role of the media, intellectuals and academics to contemporary Christian origins and New Testament scholarship. Part One looks at the ways in which New Testament and Christian origins scholarship has historically been influenced by its political and social settings over the past hundred years or so. Moving on to the present, the following chapter then applies Herman and Chomsky’s propaganda model of manufacturing consent in the mass media to the recent explosion of biblical scholars writing on the internet, in particularly ‘biblio-bloggers’. It is clear that political views in ‘biblio-blogging’ conform strikingly to the emphases that come through in Herman and Chomsky’s analysis of the mass media and intellectuals, particularly with the standard lines on the ‘war on terror’ and views on the contemporary Middle East. The rest of the book takes up modified key areas of the propaganda model in more detail. Part Two looks at the Orientalist rhetoric of clashing civilisations and how this relates to the ‘war on terror’ and the creation of Islam, Arabs, Middle East etc. as the Great Enemy in the media and relevant intellectual thought since the 1970s and, to use Derek Gregory’s phrase, ‘hideously emboldened’ in the ‘war on terror’. The next chapter then shows how this context has had a highly noticeable impact on the use of social sciences in New Testament and Christian origins scholarship, in particular the stark generalisations of scholars using cultural/social anthropology based on contemporary studies of ‘the Middle East’. Disturbingly, some of this scholarship has many rhetorical links with Anglo-American foreign policy interests in the Middle East and beyond, making some politically charged statements that cohere closely with recent intellectual defences of actions in Iraq, Palestine and beyond. Part Three looks at issues of Palestine and Israel in the media alongside Christian, secular and relevant intellectual thought since the ‘Six Day War’ of 1967, focusing in particular on the dramatic shift towards widespread support for Israel. This also includes an analysis of the recent and controversial case of Nadia Abu el-Haj’s tenure at Barnard. The following chapter shows how this interest in Israel has had a profound impact on historical Jesus and Christian origins studies, particularly the strange emphasis on ‘Jewishness’ and misplaced allegations of ‘antisemitism’ since the 1970s. Despite the shift in support of Israel this is rarely done for love of Jews, Judaism, Israel or Israelis because there remains a notable cultural, political and religious superiority in Anglo-American scholarship. While owing much also to an Orientalist tradition, this too is strongly echoed in scholarship of Christian origins where, for all the emphasis on the ‘Jewishness’ of Jesus and the first Christians, it is extremely common to find Jesus or the first Christians being ‘better than’ Judaism or overriding key symbols of Judaism as constructed by scholarship, done, ironically, by frequent ignoring of relevant Jewish texts. The end results of contemporary scholarship are not dramatically different from the results of the anti-Jewish and antisemitic scholarship of much of the twentieth century. Contents Preface Part I: Christian Origins and New Testament Studies in Ideologically and Historically Contaminated Contexts Chapter 1: Introduction: Reading the History of New Testament and Christian Origins Scholarship Chapter 2: The Politics of the Bibliobloggers Appendix: Selected Unedited Excerpts from the Now Defunct Dr Cathey’s Blog for Purposes of Reference Part II: Neo-Orientalism: Orientalism, Hideously Emboldened Chapter 3: The Context: A Clash of Civilisations? Chapter 4: Anglo-American Power and Liberal Scholarship: Scholarly Reconstructions of the Social World of Christian Origins Part III: ‘Jewishness’, Jesus and Christian Origins since 1967 Chapter 5: The Context: Judaism and Christianity; Israel and the West Chapter 6: Jewish…but not that Jewish Conclusions Reviews ‘This work is chocked full of important and innovative observations – and the book as a whole makes a seminal contribution to the field. It is sharp, to the point, and critically engaging. I have absolute confidence it will be well received by biblical scholars of all persuasions.’ Todd Penner, Gould H. and Marie Cloud Associate Professor in Religious Studies, Austin College, Texas 'Jesus in an Age of Terror is a provocative book but rightly so. The author's careful, incisive analysis lays bare the dominant assumptions and dynamics of a discipline that has failed both morally and intellectually. With considerable style and vigour Crossley applies the critical tools of Chomsky, Said and others in exposing the mechanisms by which the work of New Testament scholars has, with few exceptions, replicated the dominant discourses that underpin contemporary Western hegemony in the modern world and as a consequence, produces 'knowledge' about the origins of Christianity and the historical Jesus that is often spurious, and sometimes, downright dangerous in its implications. This book will be uncomfortable reading for all of us involved in the study of early Christianity but it cannot be dismissed as mere polemic. It is a sustained, judicious and informed critique for which we should all be grateful.Crossley's voice is a vital one and this book marks an important shift in the critical and theoretical literacy that should be demanded of future contributions within the field.' Justin Meggitt, University Senior Lecturer in the Study of Religion and the Origins of Christianity, University of Cambridge Specifications
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