Joshua’s conquest of Canaan was often used in colonial history as a model for the genocide of Indigenous peoples, but in legal arguments since the sixteenth century, the Hebrew Bible also provided sanctions for the defence of Indigenous rights. This unit retraces such contradictory movements in modern colonial histories and describes the variety of outcomes in different contexts, with a focus on the Australian colonies. We will also explore the ways in which policies of assimilation in the twentieth century were often entwined with Christian theological motivations. The possibilities for decolonial understandings of Indigenous rights will be explored with special attention to renewed practices of biblical interpretation.
Unit code: BS3041W
Unit status: Approved (New unit)
Points: 18.0
Unit level: Undergraduate Level 3
Unit discipline: Biblical Studies
Proposing College: Whitley College
Show when this unit is running1. | Discuss the influence of biblical interpretation within constructions of colonialism |
2. | Articulate the origins and development of the concepts of Indigenous rights |
3. | Describe the ways in which Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander connections to country have been viewed through the lenses of biblical theology |
4. | Analyse the ways in which biblical theologies have supported policies of assimilation |
5. | Evaluate the opportunities for decolonial biblical interpretation in the context of settler Australian churches |
Online lectures and seminar discussions, with synchronous and asynchronous modes of participation.
Type | Description | Word count | Weight (%) |
---|---|---|---|
Exegesis - One 2,000 word Exegesis | 2000 | 40.0 | |
Forum - Five 200 word forum posts. | Not fewer than 5 entries of approximately 200 words each, responding to set readings and peer interaction |
1000 | 10.0 |
Essay - One 2,000 word Essay | 2000 | 50.0 |
Unit approved for the University of Divinity by Prof Albert Haddad on 31 Oct, 2023
Unit record last updated: 2024-07-18 17:25:29 +1000