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(re)Citing Diaspora as Scriptural Cartographies

(re)Citing Diaspora as Scriptural Cartographies Sightings of the Black Atlantic and Story-Telling Difference before Reading

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Scripturalization: Discourse, Formation, Power

(re)Citing Diaspora as Scriptural Cartographies

Sightings of the Black Atlantic and Story-Telling Difference before Reading

A. Francis Carter, Jr.

Religion / Biblical Studies / General

What happens when disciplines that study diaspora are inclined to perceive knowledge derived from Black life as anachronism?

How scholars write history and interpret early Christian texts is not neutral; they rehearse cartographies drawn by Enlightenment thinkers who treated linearity as the shape of human progress and the nation-state as its natural container. These inherited cartographies function as unquestioned scriptures that shape how interpreters reconstruct the past and read texts within those historical reconstructions. In this book, New Testament scholar A. Francis Carter Jr. centers diaspora as a prism to explore and intervene in hermeneutical theory. Through contextual readings, Carter exposes a disciplinary predisposition towards anti-Blackness incipient to Diaspora Studies. He then reorients the discourse and maps diaspora's etymological origins and biblical uses through a Black Atlantic cartographic framework - replacing sameness with differentness, linearity with polyvocality, and the erasure of Black life with its recognition as a site from which scripture, history, and diaspora become legible.

A. Francis Carter, Jr. is Assistant Professor of New Testament and early Christian literature and Director of Black Church Traditions and African American Faith-Life at Phillips Theological Seminary, USA.

Publication Date: 10 December 2026
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Imprint: T&T Clark
ISBN-13: 9781978716148
Format: Hardback
Page Count: 320
Weight (oz): 16.0

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