Is David Starkey right or has the Jamaican bible movement lost its mind?: Language and atonement.
Book chapter
Beckford, R. 2016. Is David Starkey right or has the Jamaican bible movement lost its mind?: Language and atonement. in: Andrews, K. and Palmer, L. (ed.) Blackness in Britain Abingdon Routledge. pp. 101-114
Authors | Beckford, R. |
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Editors | Andrews, K. and Palmer, L. |
Abstract | This chapter is a critical correlation between atonement theology and the black vernacular to produce a redemptive view of the Jamaican language. The essay explores the imperial linguistics of British colonialism in the West Indies, and the evolution of Jamaican patois, centering on current debates over the validity and utility of patois in postcolonial Jamaica, and Jamaican diaspora communities in Britain. Through a critical correlation with womanist atonement theory, a redemptive view of patois is constructed, where language functions as lived experience of resistance to the structural evil of empire. |
Page range | 101-114 |
Year | 2016 |
Book title | Blackness in Britain |
Publisher | Routledge |
Output status | Published |
Place of publication | Abingdon |
Series | Race and Ethnicity |
ISBN | 9781138840638 |
Publication dates | |
2016 | |
Publication process dates | |
Deposited | 24 Mar 2017 |
Related URL | https://www.routledge.com/Blackness-in-Britain/Andrews-Palmer/p/book/9781138840638 |
https://repository.canterbury.ac.uk/item/88207/is-david-starkey-right-or-has-the-jamaican-bible-movement-lost-its-mind-language-and-atonement
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