Who Is to Blame for Judges 19?: Interplay Between the Text and a Chinese Context

Author:   Grace Kwan Sik Tsoi ,  Mark G Brett
Publisher:   Pickwick Publications
Volume:   8
ISBN:  

9781666730630


Pages:   234
Publication Date:   29 June 2022
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
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Who Is to Blame for Judges 19?: Interplay Between the Text and a Chinese Context


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Author:   Grace Kwan Sik Tsoi ,  Mark G Brett
Publisher:   Pickwick Publications
Imprint:   Pickwick Publications
Volume:   8
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.20cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.318kg
ISBN:  

9781666730630


ISBN 10:   1666730637
Pages:   234
Publication Date:   29 June 2022
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Reviews

"""With Dr. Tsoi as their expert guide, readers are helped to negotiate the various contexts of the shocking crime described in Judges 19. . . . The ancient biblical context, the Chinese context of the translators of the CUV Bible, and Western biblical criticism are adroitly explored, critiqued, and, through the skill of Dr. Tsoi, enabled to inform each other. The result is both liberating and challenging. This study exposes the evil of violence against women, an evil that the Bible refuses to condone."" --Greg Goswell, Christ College, Sydney ""Tsoi makes a welcome contribution to contextual studies of the Hebrew Bible with a focus on Judges 19. By using a contextual hermeneutic for Chinese Christians and the tools of biblical criticism, she offers fresh insights on this very controversial chapter. This is an excellent and very helpful resource for those seeking insight into contextual modes of reading, biblical interpretation in the Chinese context, the politics of translation, and concubinage."" --Monica Jyotsna Melanchthon, Pilgrim Theological College, University of Divinity ""Reading Judges 19 philologically, culturally, intertextually, narratively, and ideologically--all can be found in this one title written by Dr. Tsoi. It is an intersection and integration of scholarly insights, like a satisfying treat to searching minds. The book is food for thought for people who wish to engage the biblical text meaningfully by considering the biblical context, its social and political dynamic, and a reader's cultural milieu."" --Elaine Wei-Fun Goh, Malaysia Theological Seminary ""This attempt to resolve the enigma of the violence in Judges 19 proves to be an endeavor of a brave heart, challenging the most popular Chinese translation of the Bible. Dr. Tsoi's success is explicit. Though she was brought up with the CUV, she exercises her scholar acuity to read this story both in and out of Chinese culture, leading to a fruitful dialogue with the Hebrew Bible. I strongly recommend this book."" --Dennis T. Law, Chinese Theological College Australia ""What have concubines to do with the Bible? Concubinage existed in China until the 1950s. If you want to know what the Chinese, especially Chinese Christians, think of concubinage and the fate of concubines, this is the book! Grace Tsoi has endeavored an exceptional work on how Chinese biblical scholarship ought to engage the ancient Hebrew Bible without sacrificing ethnic identity or cultural scholarship."" --Philip P. Chia, Chung Yuan Christian University"


With Dr. Tsoi as their expert guide, readers are helped to negotiate the various contexts of the shocking crime described in Judges 19. . . . The ancient biblical context, the Chinese context of the translators of the CUV Bible, and Western biblical criticism are adroitly explored, critiqued, and, through the skill of Dr. Tsoi, enabled to inform each other. The result is both liberating and challenging. This study exposes the evil of violence against women, an evil that the Bible refuses to condone. --Greg Goswell, Christ College, Sydney Tsoi makes a welcome contribution to contextual studies of the Hebrew Bible with a focus on Judges 19. By using a contextual hermeneutic for Chinese Christians and the tools of biblical criticism, she offers fresh insights on this very controversial chapter. This is an excellent and very helpful resource for those seeking insight into contextual modes of reading, biblical interpretation in the Chinese context, the politics of translation, and concubinage. --Monica Jyotsna Melanchthon, Pilgrim Theological College, University of Divinity Reading Judges 19 philologically, culturally, intertextually, narratively, and ideologically--all can be found in this one title written by Dr. Tsoi. It is an intersection and integration of scholarly insights, like a satisfying treat to searching minds. The book is food for thought for people who wish to engage the biblical text meaningfully by considering the biblical context, its social and political dynamic, and a reader's cultural milieu. --Elaine Wei-Fun Goh, Malaysia Theological Seminary This attempt to resolve the enigma of the violence in Judges 19 proves to be an endeavor of a brave heart, challenging the most popular Chinese translation of the Bible. Dr. Tsoi's success is explicit. Though she was brought up with the CUV, she exercises her scholar acuity to read this story both in and out of Chinese culture, leading to a fruitful dialogue with the Hebrew Bible. I strongly recommend this book. --Dennis T. Law, Chinese Theological College Australia What have concubines to do with the Bible? Concubinage existed in China until the 1950s. If you want to know what the Chinese, especially Chinese Christians, think of concubinage and the fate of concubines, this is the book! Grace Tsoi has endeavored an exceptional work on how Chinese biblical scholarship ought to engage the ancient Hebrew Bible without sacrificing ethnic identity or cultural scholarship. --Philip P. Chia, Chung Yuan Christian University


Author Information

Grace Kwan Sik Tsoi is academic dean and lecturer of Old Testament at Chinese Theological College Australia at Sydney. Mark G. Brett is Professor of Hebrew Bible at Whitley College, MCD University of Divinity

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