The Ghost of Hosea in African American Interpretation

Author:

Dorsey Aaron D.1

Affiliation:

1. Hebrew Bible, Garrett Evangelical Theological Seminary

Abstract

Abstract African American interpretation of the book of Hosea demonstrates the multiple priorities that define African American biblical scholarship and the diverse interactions between the book of Hosea and the needs of African American communities. African American liberationists have focused their attention on Hosea’s references to Egypt in the project of recovering black presence in the Bible. Renita Weems and other African American womanist and feminist scholars have critically analyzed the metaphors in Hosea, especially the marriage metaphor, to find ways of resisting the embedded harmful ideologies and create liberatory readings for African American women and other vulnerable communities. The study of Hosea by womanist scholars contributed directly to the formation of womanist hermeneutics which seek to empower readers to creatively and critically engage with the biblical texts. These scholars have also gestured toward an ecological reading of the book of Hosea. Allusions to Hosea by Toni Morrison in Beloved have clarified opportunities for an intercontextual reading between exilic/postexilic redactions of Hosea and African American communities as they address issues of hostile appropriation and traumatic memory after devastation. The range of interpretive projects discussed in this essay illustrate Hosea’s direct and indirect effects on African American life, and the dexterity of African American interpreters relates even troubling biblical texts to the well-being of their communities.

Publisher

Oxford University Press

Reference34 articles.

1. Bailey, Randall C.  1991. “Beyond Identification: The Use of Africans in the Old Testament Poetry and Narratives.” In Cain Hope Felder, ed., Stony the Road We Trod: African American Biblical Interpretation. Minneapolis: Fortress, 165–86.

2. Bailey, Randall C.  1995. “They’re Nothing but Incestuous Bastards: The Polemical Use of Sex and Sexuality in the Hebrew Canon Narratives.” In Fernando F. Segovia and Mary Ann Tolbert, eds., Reading from This Place, Volume 1: Social Location and Biblical Interpretation in the United States. Minneapolis: Fortress, 121–38.

3. Bridgeman, Valerie.  2016. “Womanist Approaches to the Prophets.” In Carolyn J. Sharp., ed., The Oxford Handbook of the Prophets. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 483–90.

4. Giving Blood to the Scraps: Haints, History, and Hosea in Beloved.;African American Review,1994

5. Burke, Adam A.  2011. “An Anthropological Model for the Investigation of the Archaeology of Refugees in Iron Age Judah and Its Environs.” In Brad E. Kelle, Frank Ritchel Ames, and Jacob L. Wright, eds., Interpreting Exile: Displacement and Deportation in Biblical and Modern Contexts. SBLAIL 10. Atlanta: SBL, 41–56.

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