Elise Edwards

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Both Jesus and the slaves suffer outside the city gates. Outside the city gate for Jesus meant suffering in a place designated by the Roman state for displaying its considerable power over bodies. The parallel with the slaves is remarkable. They too stand outside the city gates and mark the orchestration of the Portuguese state over their lives. This christological architecture of the sale of slaves like the Christ event signifies a similar instrumentality, a similar use of the body for the sake of the state.
The Christian Imagination: Theology and the Origins of Race
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