Reading the Margins

The Bible and theology are contested spaces, battlegrounds where participants guard entrenched beliefs against perceived threats. But literature, observes novelist Salman Rushdie, opens the universe. It expands what we perceive and understand, and ultimately what we are. Writers make our world feel larger and more inclusive. When other forces push in the direction of narrowness, bigotry, tribalism, cultism, and war, fiction encourages understanding, sympathy, and identification with others. Reading the Margins invites readers to immerse themselves in imaginary worlds, and to pursue visions of justice and compassion. Whether stories about poverty, empire, war, or the environment, the writers considered raise moral questions and often, in the process--even unwittingly--deepen our understanding of biblical calls for kindness and mercy.

Reading the Margins offers a kind of commentary on biblical ethics. Using Matthew's Beatitudes and sheep and goats parable as an organizing principle, Gilmour argues there is much to learn about Jesus's "peacemakers" and call to feed the hungry from aspirational fiction and poetry.

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Reading the Margins

The Bible and theology are contested spaces, battlegrounds where participants guard entrenched beliefs against perceived threats. But literature, observes novelist Salman Rushdie, opens the universe. It expands what we perceive and understand, and ultimately what we are. Writers make our world feel larger and more inclusive. When other forces push in the direction of narrowness, bigotry, tribalism, cultism, and war, fiction encourages understanding, sympathy, and identification with others. Reading the Margins invites readers to immerse themselves in imaginary worlds, and to pursue visions of justice and compassion. Whether stories about poverty, empire, war, or the environment, the writers considered raise moral questions and often, in the process--even unwittingly--deepen our understanding of biblical calls for kindness and mercy.

Reading the Margins offers a kind of commentary on biblical ethics. Using Matthew's Beatitudes and sheep and goats parable as an organizing principle, Gilmour argues there is much to learn about Jesus's "peacemakers" and call to feed the hungry from aspirational fiction and poetry.

33.99 In Stock
Reading the Margins

Reading the Margins

by Michael J. Gilmour
Reading the Margins

Reading the Margins

by Michael J. Gilmour

eBook

$33.99 

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Overview

The Bible and theology are contested spaces, battlegrounds where participants guard entrenched beliefs against perceived threats. But literature, observes novelist Salman Rushdie, opens the universe. It expands what we perceive and understand, and ultimately what we are. Writers make our world feel larger and more inclusive. When other forces push in the direction of narrowness, bigotry, tribalism, cultism, and war, fiction encourages understanding, sympathy, and identification with others. Reading the Margins invites readers to immerse themselves in imaginary worlds, and to pursue visions of justice and compassion. Whether stories about poverty, empire, war, or the environment, the writers considered raise moral questions and often, in the process--even unwittingly--deepen our understanding of biblical calls for kindness and mercy.

Reading the Margins offers a kind of commentary on biblical ethics. Using Matthew's Beatitudes and sheep and goats parable as an organizing principle, Gilmour argues there is much to learn about Jesus's "peacemakers" and call to feed the hungry from aspirational fiction and poetry.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781506469362
Publisher: Augsburg Fortress, Publishers
Publication date: 09/24/2024
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 196
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Michael J. Gilmour is Distinguished Professor of New Testament and English literature at Providence University College and Theological Seminary in Otterburne, Manitoba, Canada. He holds a Ph.D. from McGill University and is the author of many books, including Animals in the Writings of C. S. Lewis (2017), The Gospel According to Bob Dylan (2011), and Tangled Up in the Bible: Bob Dylan and Scripture (2004).

Table of Contents

Preface

Introduction: Love Your Neighbor as Yourself

Chapter 1: Poverty and Woody Guthrie's Train Bound for Glory

Chapter 2: Anne Brontë Confronts Domestic Unrest: Reading Wisdom's Diary

Chapter 3: Daniel Defoe's Shipwrecked Bible and Jean Rhys's Cardboard World

Chapter 4: Joy Kogawa and Salman Rushdie 'Verses' Racism

Chapter 5: The Lion, the Witch and the Rock Star: Bob Dylan in Narnia

Chapter 6: An Old Curiosity Shop and an Old Copy of Bunyan's Progress

Chapter 7: The Meek Shall Inherit the Earth: Richard Adams's Rabbit Theologians

Chapter 8: The Gospel of the Imagination, or The Imaginary Gospel

Afterword: Censorship and The Far Side of Religion

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