H
Hulisani Ramantswana
Researcher at University of South Africa
Publications - 27
Citations - 138
Hulisani Ramantswana is an academic researcher from University of South Africa. The author has contributed to research in topics: Hermeneutics & Scholarship. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 23 publications receiving 117 citations.
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Prophets praying for, or preying on people's faith: A reflection on prophetic ministry in the South African context
TL;DR: This paper argued that there is now a resurgence of the prophetic ministry as a special office as evidenced by the establishment of neo-prophetic churches and argued that Neo-prophets are tapping into people's longing for the fresh divine word to speak directly into their personal situations.
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Decolonising Biblical hermeneutics in the (South) African context
TL;DR: The recognition of social location as a heuristic device in biblical hermeneutics does not necessarily equate to the production of radical and alternative knowledge as mentioned in this paper, and it is worth noting that the emergence of an African biblical HERMENEUR does not imply that the colonial systems have been overcome - coloniality is able to survive and thrive even under the tag of African.
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Anything new under the sun of South African Old Testament scholarship? African Qoheleths' review of OTE 1994 - 2010
TL;DR: Prior argues that the book of Ecclesiastes presumes such a lively and competitive economic environment, full of risk, a somewhat arbitrary, rapidly changing world, where the new rich of today could easily become the new poor of tomorrow as mentioned in this paper.
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Song(s) of Struggle: A Decolonial Reading of Psalm 137 in Light of South Africa’s Struggle Songs
TL;DR: In this paper, a decolonial reading of Ps 137 is presented in light of South African songs of struggle. But this reading is based on the assumption that Ps 137 was originally written by the golah community in response to the colonial relations between the oppressor and the oppressed.
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Not free while nature remains colonised: A decolonial reading of Isaiah 11:6-9
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that human liberty is intertwined with the liberty of nature and that decolonisation remains incomplete as long the colonial matrix of power that divides African humans from nature persists.