Introduction
PART I: APPROACHING MARK
1. Rereading Discipleship
2. Knowledge, Body, and Subjectivity in Theoretical Frameworks
3. Asian and Asian American Feminist Hermeneutics of Phronesis
PART II: A PHRONETIC READING OF MARK
4. Empire and Body: Bodies, Territories, and Language
5. The Phantasmic Body (Mark 6:45-52)
6. The Consumed Body (Mark 7:24-30)
7. The Passive Body (Mark 7:31-37)
Conclusion
Jin Young Choi rereads discipleship in the Gospel of Mark from a postcolonial feminist perspective, developing an Asian and Asian American hermeneutics of phronesis. Colonized subjects perceive Jesus' body as phantasmic. Discipleship means embodying the mystery of this body while engaging with invisible, placeless and voiceless others.
Jin Young Choi is Assistant Professor of New Testament and Christian Origins and a Louisville Institute fellow. She serves as co-chair of the Society of Biblical Literature s Asian and Asian American Hermeneutics group.