Our Mission

Postcolonial Networks brings together scholars, activists, and leaders with the urgency of a movement to foster decolonized relationships, innovative scholarship, and social transformation.

Postcolonial Networks Board

Postcolonial Networks Books

A Postcolonial Networks book project earns special recognition!

April 16th, 2014|

James Elisha Taneti's Caste, Gender, and Christianity in Colonial India has been named one of "fifteen books published in 2013 for special recognition of their contribution to mission studies."

A PN Book Project: Evangelical Postcolonial Conversations (July 2014)

February 2nd, 2014|

Evangelical Postcolonial Conversations: Global Awakening in Theology and Praxis, a product of the Postcolonial Roundtable led by Postcolonial Networks, is forthcoming with InterVarsity Press Academic.

Book Release: Caste, Gender, and Christianity in Colonial India

November 22nd, 2013|

Our congratulations to James Elisha Taneti, author of the forthcoming Caste, Gender, and Christianity in Colonial India: Telugu Women in Mission, which will be the third volume in the Postcolonialism and Religions series, a partnership between Postcolonial Networks and Palgrave MacMillan.

Book Release: A Postcolonial African American Re-reading of Colossians

June 20th, 2013|

Below is the second text–and the first single-authored one–to be published in the Postcolonialism and Religions series, edited by Joseph Duggan, founder of Postcolonial Networks, and J. Jayakiran Sebastian, Dean of Lutheran Theological Seminary at Philadelphia.
Annie Tinsley, A Postcolonial African American Re-reading of Colossians: Identity, Reception, and Interpretation under the Gaze of Empire, Postcolonialism and […]

Book Release :: Decolonizing the Body of Christ

June 27th, 2012|

Decolonizing the Body of Christ: Theology and Theory After Empire offers a preview of the editors' priority for multireligious, indigenous, and transnational scholarly voices. The goal is to expand the postcolonial debate by inclusion of contextual voices and disciplines once excluded by canonical leaders of postcolonial studies...