Terrell Carver
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Jesus
Masculinity and the ‘son of man’
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This chapter explores the gospel accounts, reviewing well-established but often disregarded hermeneutic difficulties concerned with authorship, narration and historicity. Taking the narratives as a set of ambiguous but dramatic scenes and encounters, it focus on the reactions that other characters in the set pieces have to Jesus, and his reactions to them. This exposes the extreme novelty and disturbing quality that Jesus' teachings have on his interlocutors, variously, according to who they are and what (else) they want. It also reveals that his teaching and example recommend and perform an inverted masculinity that runs quite opposite to any recognisable hegemonic conception, of his time or ours, without making Jesus feminine, or woman-centred as such. Jesus' gender politics is not just transgressive within himself, as a performer of a reinterpreted masculinity. The chapter argues that Jesus represents an interesting challenge in political theory, as he is so literally 'something else'.

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