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- Jennifer Glancy, Le Moyne College, USA
"I can only echo Charles's urgent call to biblical scholars to pay very close attention to the literary functions and historical contexts in which slaves are mentioned in our sources. As this book amply proves, doing so yields truly important insights, both historically and theologically... Charles's work has indeed created significant new knowledge, and in many cases it also establishes convincing redundancy for scholarly conclusions that have been reached earlier."
- S. Scott Bartchy, Review of Biblical Literature
"Every attempt to unearth the destinies of slaves like Euclia, is an important, meaningful endeavor. [...] I applaud Ronald Charles' aspiration to enlarge our knowledge of slavery in early Jewish and early Christian literature."
-Martijn Stoutjesdijk, Tilburg University, NTT Journal for Theology and the Study of Religion
"In this important monograph, Ronald Charles... notes "four crucial moments" in historical production: sources, archives, narratives, and history. Choices at each of these stages lift up some perspectives while silencing others. Charles pursues a subaltern historiography, reading "from below" to uncover slaves who have left no historical record... Charles' subaltern historiography provides one possible way to reconstruct the lives of slaves from their silences. The book makes a compelling case that those who read these texts have the ethical responsibility to do so." - Biblical Theology Bulletin
"In order to give voice to the voiceless slaves in some of these historical texts, Charles engages in subaltern readings-reading from below and from the perspective of the oppressed, against the typical elite and imperial/colonial tendencies in the texts. The important contribution of such an approach, for the study of ancient slavery, is that it once again warns us that we cannot take texts about slavery at face value and as adequate representations of the "majority" of ancient life and its inhabitants... Charles's work is a welcome addition to the study of slavery in biblical antiquity." - Chris De Wet, Neotestamentica