The Extent to which OTSSA Journal (OTE) Reflects the Indigenous African Culture and Tradition from 2001-2016

This article examines the Old Testament Society of South Africa (OTSSA) Journal (Old Testament Essays, OTE) from 2001 to 2016 in order to determine the extent to which the published articles in OTE reflect the indigenous African culture and tradition. I will examine each volume of OTE available to m...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: David T. Adamo
Format: Article
Language:Afrikaans
Published: OTSSA 2018-04-01
Series:Old Testament Essays
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spelling doaj-3ccaa5c56b6e457aa2b1832b3e497f1c2020-11-25T02:48:02ZafrOTSSAOld Testament Essays1010-99192312-36212018-04-01311426510.17159/2312-3621/2018/v31n1a4The Extent to which OTSSA Journal (OTE) Reflects the Indigenous African Culture and Tradition from 2001-2016David T. Adamo0University of South AfricaThis article examines the Old Testament Society of South Africa (OTSSA) Journal (Old Testament Essays, OTE) from 2001 to 2016 in order to determine the extent to which the published articles in OTE reflect the indigenous African culture and tradition. I will examine each volume of OTE available to me from 2001 to 2016, to determine the percentage of articles that reflect indigenous African culture and tradition. Even though OTSSA is an African association and its journal belongs to Africa and published in Africa by Africans who live in Africa, can one truly say that it reflects African OT studies or Eurocentric OT Studies? At the time when scholars all over the world are taking seriously the indigenous approach to the study of the Bible (OT), can one truly say that OTE is taking African OT studies or African contextual approaches seriously? This article’s objective is basically to challenge OT scholars who have the advantage of living, studying, and lecturing in Africa, irrespective of colour, to take African OT Studies seriously.
collection DOAJ
language Afrikaans
format Article
sources DOAJ
author David T. Adamo
spellingShingle David T. Adamo
The Extent to which OTSSA Journal (OTE) Reflects the Indigenous African Culture and Tradition from 2001-2016
Old Testament Essays
author_facet David T. Adamo
author_sort David T. Adamo
title The Extent to which OTSSA Journal (OTE) Reflects the Indigenous African Culture and Tradition from 2001-2016
title_short The Extent to which OTSSA Journal (OTE) Reflects the Indigenous African Culture and Tradition from 2001-2016
title_full The Extent to which OTSSA Journal (OTE) Reflects the Indigenous African Culture and Tradition from 2001-2016
title_fullStr The Extent to which OTSSA Journal (OTE) Reflects the Indigenous African Culture and Tradition from 2001-2016
title_full_unstemmed The Extent to which OTSSA Journal (OTE) Reflects the Indigenous African Culture and Tradition from 2001-2016
title_sort extent to which otssa journal (ote) reflects the indigenous african culture and tradition from 2001-2016
publisher OTSSA
series Old Testament Essays
issn 1010-9919
2312-3621
publishDate 2018-04-01
description This article examines the Old Testament Society of South Africa (OTSSA) Journal (Old Testament Essays, OTE) from 2001 to 2016 in order to determine the extent to which the published articles in OTE reflect the indigenous African culture and tradition. I will examine each volume of OTE available to me from 2001 to 2016, to determine the percentage of articles that reflect indigenous African culture and tradition. Even though OTSSA is an African association and its journal belongs to Africa and published in Africa by Africans who live in Africa, can one truly say that it reflects African OT studies or Eurocentric OT Studies? At the time when scholars all over the world are taking seriously the indigenous approach to the study of the Bible (OT), can one truly say that OTE is taking African OT studies or African contextual approaches seriously? This article’s objective is basically to challenge OT scholars who have the advantage of living, studying, and lecturing in Africa, irrespective of colour, to take African OT Studies seriously.
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