Interpreting Isaiah requires attention to empire. The matrix of the book of Isaiah was the imperial contexts of Assyria, Babylon, and Persia. The community of faith in these eras needed a prophetic vision for life. Not only is the book of Isaiah crafted in light of empire, but current readers cannot help but approach Isaiah in light of imperial realities today. As a neglected area of research, Isaiah and Imperial Context probes how empire can illumine Isaiah through essays that utilize archaeology, history, literary approaches, post-colonialism, and feminism within the various sections of Isaiah. The contributors are Andrew T. Abernethy, Mark G. Brett, Tim Bulkeley, John Goldingay, Christopher B. Hays, Joy Hooker, Malcolm Mac Mac Donald, Judith E. Mc Kinlay, Tim Meadowcroft, Lena-Sofia Tiemeyer, and David Ussishkin.
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Tim Meadowcroft is senior research fellow in biblical studies at Laidlaw College, Auckland, New Zealand, and editor of the Journal of Theological Interpretation. He is also priest assistant in the Anglican parish of Henderson/Swanson in West Auckland.