Sense And Stigma In The Gospels Depictions Of Sensory-disabled Characters

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Synopsis

The senses are used within New Testament texts as instruments of knowledge and power and thus constitute important mediators of cultural knowledge and experience. Likewise, those instances where sensory faculty is perceived to be 'disabled' in some way also become key sites for ideological commentary and critique. However, often biblical scholarship, itself 'disabled' by eye-centric and textocentric 'norms', has read sensory-disabled characters as nothing more than
inert sites of healing; their agency, including their alternative sensory modes of communication and resistance to oppression, remain largely unaddressed.

In response, Louise J. Lawrence seeks to initiate a variety of interdisciplinary dialogues with disability studies and sensory anthropology in a quest to refigure characters with sensory disabilities featured in the gospels and provide alternative interpretations of their conditions and social interactions. In each instance the identity of those stigmatised as 'other' (according to particular physiological, social and cultural 'norms') are recovered by exploring ethnographic accounts which
document the stories of those experiencing similar rejection on account of perceived sensory 'difference' in diverse cross-cultural settings. Through this process these 'disabled' characters are recast as individuals capable of employing certain strategies which destabilize the stigma imposed upon them
and tactical performers who can subversively achieve their social goals.

Book details

Series:
Biblical Refigurations
Author:
Louise J. Lawrence
ISBN:
9780191667480
Related ISBNs:
9780199590087, 9780199590094
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Pages:
208
Reading age:
Not specified
Includes images:
No
Date of addition:
2022-10-06
Usage restrictions:
Copyright
Copyright date:
2013
Copyright by:
N/A 
Adult content:
No
Language:
English
Categories:
Nonfiction