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An Africana Abbreviated Bible: Notations in Blue
Coles
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An Africana Abbreviated Bible: Notations in Blue in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $175.50

Coles
An Africana Abbreviated Bible: Notations in Blue in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $175.50
Loading Inventory...
Size: Hardcover
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Drawing on the deep currents of Africana thought,Notations in Bluereimagines Scripture through the intellectual, historical, and spiritual textures of Black life.Hugh R. Page, Jr. combines literary translation, philological insight, and cultural memory to illuminate how biblical texts speak powerfully into experiences of diaspora, marginalization, resilience, and communal striving. Blending autobiography, poetry, flash fiction, and theological reflection, the volume invites readers to encounter the Bible as a living archive shaped by, and continually reshaped within, Africana epistemologies and ancestral wisdom. Across its four sections, the work guides readers through key passages from the Hebrew Bible, New Testament, and ancient Near Eastern literature. Examples include Genesis 11-12 on diaspora as generative experience; Exodus 19 on home, memory, and dispersion; Ruth 1 on the bitterness and strength of displaced women; Song of Songs 8 on love's cosmic power; Isaiah, Jeremiah, and Ezekiel on visionaries navigating crisis; and Revelation 22 on esoteric hope and cosmic renewal. The volume also dialogues with theEpic of Gilgamesh, the UgariticBaal Cycle, and Sumerian god lists to explore broader mythic and cultural frameworks that inform Africana readings of Scripture.
Drawing on the deep currents of Africana thought,Notations in Bluereimagines Scripture through the intellectual, historical, and spiritual textures of Black life.Hugh R. Page, Jr. combines literary translation, philological insight, and cultural memory to illuminate how biblical texts speak powerfully into experiences of diaspora, marginalization, resilience, and communal striving. Blending autobiography, poetry, flash fiction, and theological reflection, the volume invites readers to encounter the Bible as a living archive shaped by, and continually reshaped within, Africana epistemologies and ancestral wisdom. Across its four sections, the work guides readers through key passages from the Hebrew Bible, New Testament, and ancient Near Eastern literature. Examples include Genesis 11-12 on diaspora as generative experience; Exodus 19 on home, memory, and dispersion; Ruth 1 on the bitterness and strength of displaced women; Song of Songs 8 on love's cosmic power; Isaiah, Jeremiah, and Ezekiel on visionaries navigating crisis; and Revelation 22 on esoteric hope and cosmic renewal. The volume also dialogues with theEpic of Gilgamesh, the UgariticBaal Cycle, and Sumerian god lists to explore broader mythic and cultural frameworks that inform Africana readings of Scripture.


















