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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Clara A.B. JosephPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.350kg ISBN: 9780367660338ISBN 10: 0367660334 Pages: 178 Publication Date: 30 September 2020 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsClara A. B. Joseph has the splendid gift of asking challenging questions. In her sweeping study of Christian history in India, she overturns so many familiar assumptions about the rise and growth of Christianity. In particular, she forces us to see the story of Indian Christianity on its own vigorous terms, not as some latter-day import from the imperial West. The book offers a bracing reassessment of our standard ideas about empires, colonialism, and faith. Philip Jenkins, Baylor University, USA Clara A. B. Joseph has provided a critical and thoughtful analysis of South Indian Christianity that is routinely absent in many studies of postcolonial and global Christianities. Too long have interpreters of religion, whether political demagogues in India or liberal scholars of culture and religion in the West, simplistically assumed that Christianity in India is yoked to modern European colonialism. Joseph's book provides the stunning insight that Christians in India fought against European colonialism as Christians. Susan Abraham, University of California, Berkeley Christianity in India: The Anti-Colonial Turn, authored by Clara A.B.Joseph is a post-colonial reading of the history of Christianity in India, where the author emphasizes the Christian presence in the Sub-Continent during the last two thousand years. The strong argument running through the pages is that St. Thomas Christians of India attempted an anti-colonial turn in the face of the ecclesiastical and political domination of the Portuguese that was colonial at its core. The contribution of the author is unique as she analyses the Portuguese presence in India as avaricious colonial and not ecclesial, and thus an anti-colonial turn is given to the resistance of the St.Thomas Christians. Francis Thonippara, Dharmaram College A robust riposte to mainstream and nationalist repres Clara A. B. Joseph has the splendid gift of asking challenging questions. In her sweeping study of Christian history in India, she overturns so many familiar assumptions about the rise and growth of Christianity. In particular, she forces us to see the story of Indian Christianity on its own vigorous terms, not as some latter-day import from the imperial West. The book offers a bracing reassessment of our standard ideas about empires, colonialism, and faith. Philip Jenkins, Baylor University, USA Clara A. B. Joseph has provided a critical and thoughtful analysis of South Indian Christianity that is routinely absent in many studies of postcolonial and global Christianities. Too long have interpreters of religion, whether political demagogues in India or liberal scholars of culture and religion in the West, simplistically assumed that Christianity in India is yoked to modern European colonialism. Joseph's book provides the stunning insight that Christians in India fought against European colonialism as Christians. Susan Abraham, University of California, Berkeley Christianity in India: The Anti-Colonial Turn, authored by Clara A.B.Joseph is a post-colonial reading of the history of Christianity in India, where the author emphasizes the Christian presence in the Sub-Continent during the last two thousand years. The strong argument running through the pages is that St. Thomas Christians of India attempted an anti-colonial turn in the face of the ecclesiastical and political domination of the Portuguese that was colonial at its core. The contribution of the author is unique as she analyses the Portuguese presence in India as avaricious colonial and not ecclesial, and thus an anti-colonial turn is given to the resistance of the St.Thomas Christians. Francis Thonippara, Dharmaram College A robust riposte to mainstream and nationalist representation of Christians of India as products of Western colonialism. This smart and penetrating volume looks at the story of the Thomas Christians whose heritage goes back to pre-colonial times and at their valiant resistance to efforts to stifle, revise or curb their traditions, customs, language, and literature. Clara Joseph's research is compelling, her analysis is acute and the style is serene. It is a fine example of restorative hermeneutics and its daring and controversial insights will be much studied and long scrutinized. R.S.Sugirtharajah, University of Birmingham A riveting read. Clara Joseph compels us to reconsider at a fundamental level the relationship between Christianity, colonialism, and India. More broadly, she convincingly dismantles certain commonplace assumptions of both postcolonial studies and histories of world Christianity. Stephen D. Moore, Edmund S. Janes Professor of New Testament Studies, The Theological School, Drew University Author InformationClara A.B. Joseph is Associate Professor of English and Adjunct Associate Professor of Religious Studies at the University of Calgary, Canada. Her research interests include postcolonial studies, studies in Christianity, literary theory, and literature and ethics. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |