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For instance, one of the articles (Ezekiel's Axl) begins, "What if Axl Rose, tempermental singer from the heavy metal band Guns n' Roses, and Ezekiel, eccentric prophet from the Hebrew Bible, were to be compared with each other?" The reader can only stammer out . . . Dude man you've gotta be flipping me. One can only imagine the scene, some guy is sitting around reading the Book of (no doubt manic depressive but divinely inspired) Ezekiel one day and listening to (equally manic depressive and divinely inspired) Axl Rose as screaches out something to the effect of "Take me down to the Paradise City . . . ", when suddenly it occurs to him Paradise City = Kingdom of God.
Several of the essays deal with common heresies, e.g. Jesus set Judas up to do him in (its all part of the divine conspiracy errr . . . plan), etc. And the more interesting ones deal with blasphemy, gnosticism, and the future of civilization. The final essay deals with the works of science fiction writer Philip K. Dick (one of the other science fiction writers who started his own religion besides Hubbard), and it explores his relationship with the early Gnostics. I must say that this essay reinvigorated my interest in Dick, who I had read intently in my youth, esp. VALIS, and is a good introduction to the man for those who look forward to learning about his bizarre ideas.
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This book has both direction and drive. In seven compact yet thorough discussions we are introduced, in theory and practice, to seven contemporary approaches to the practice of biblical reading. Many, if not all, of these (reader-response criticism, poststructuralism, feminist and womanist criticism) are hardly novel outside of the biblical field but then that seems the point of this book; that is, to attempt (or continue to attempt) to intergrate biblical studies ever more closely with, or into, literary studies and cultural studies. This seems the pervasive agenda of this book.
I must admit that I have an interest in reviewing this book, however. I was taught for three years as an undergraduate by one of the "Bible and Culture Collective", Stephen D. Moore. I can confirm that the Collective, if Moore be an example, do indeed practice what they preach in this book. I have to say it sets the Bible on fire in new and exciting ways. If you want to engage the Bible from some new angles or just want to get up date and clear in your mind on contemporary methods of biblical interpretation then get this book. It has no serious challengers in its field to date.