Description: Scripturally Enslaved : Bible Politics, Slavery, and the American Renaissance 172 pages ; 24 cm. 2009. Investigates the ways in which the literature of the American Renaissance negotiates the ethical, theological, political, and aesthetic implications of the Bible's entanglement in the mid-nineteenth-century debts over slavery. In chapters on both nonfiction (sermons, ethnographies, and political rulings) and fiction (Edgar Allan Poe's The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym, Frederick Douglass's Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, an America Slave, and Herman Melville's Moby-Dick, among others. Scripturally Enslaved explores the ways in which antebellum writers represent and respond to the use of biblical materials in the politics of race. By examining the intersections of the discourses of religion and race, the book complicates the study of both religious experience and cultural engagement in the texts of the American Renaissance and extends the argument for the centrality of the slavery experience in all American texts of the period.
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All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Publication Year: 2009
Type: Textbook
Format: Hardcover
Language: English
Subject Area: Slavery
Publication Name: Scripturally Enslaved
Educational Level: Adult & Further Education
Author: Shaindy Rudoff
Features: 1st Edition
Level: Advanced
Publisher: Bar-Ilan University Press
Subject: Bible and Slavery