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In this collection, scholars from diverse geographical locations
revisit a cluster of five biblical texts: Ruth, Song of Songs,
Qoheleth (Ecclesiastes), Lamentations and Esther. The volume
presents various viewpoints and contexts-geographical, communal,
religious, social, economical and ethical. Matching scholarship
with social awareness, the contributors keep asking themselves and
their readers a dual-faced question: how does our life context
influence our scholarly and non-scholarly readings of the Bible,
and how does reading the Bible critically influence our life? To
answer this question and to show it at work the contributors employ
a range of contextual lenses. Geography is a major factor of the
contributors' contexts - with contributors from South Africa,
Argentina, Israel, the Pacific Islands - but not the only one to
influence their readings. Issues of society, culture and community
are at the foreground for all contributors and their reading
agendas with specific focus on the AIDs crisis in Africa, issues of
migration and asylum, and feminist approaches to biblical texts.
Biblical humor about women and gender remains elusive for many
readers, for its recognition may imply the realization that itGCOs
a cruel and disrespectful humor, ridicule rather than good-natured
fun. But viewing humor as social critique, as is largely done in
the essays in this volume, with respect to both the texts read and
their actual or implied author, may be fun as well as significant
for understanding the biblical worlds. As most of the essays show,
writing about women is writing about men as well. In other words,
it is writing about gender roles. The critique of women, womanhood
and femaleness implied by biblical and related texts serves, in
equal measure, as a critique of men, manhood and maleness in the
texts, of the texts authors, and of the textsGCO commentators and
readers. Contributors include Scott Spencer, Mary Shields, Kathleen
OGCOConnor, Toni Craven, Kathy Williams, Athalya Brenner, Gale Yee,
Amy-Jill Levine, and Esther Fuchs.
In this volume scholarly voices from diverse contexts and social
locations are gathered together to bring new or unfamiliar facets
of biblical texts to light, focusing on issues of intertextuality.
Samuel, Kings and Chronicles I sheds light from new perspectives on
themes in these so-called historical books including Asian American
and Chinese readings, issues of land, genealogy and maleness. The
authors challenge us to consider how we deal with cultural
distances between ourselves and these ancient writings - and
between one another in the contemporary world. These goal of these
essays is de-centre the often homogeneous first-world orientation
of much biblical scholarship and open to up new possibilities for
discovery of meaning and method.
This volume brings together disparate views about biblical texts in
the books of Samuel, Chronicles and Ezra-Nehemiah and examines
their influence in the life of contemporary communities,
demonstrating how today's environments and disorders help readers
to acquire new insights into such texts. The contributing scholars
hail from different continents - from East Asia to the United
States to Europe to South Africa and Israel - and count themselves
as members of various Jewish and Christian traditions or secularist
ways of life. But, in spite of their differences in location and
community membership, and perhaps in the spirit of the times (2020
and its global discontents), they share preoccupations with
questions of ethics in politics and life, 'proper' death, violence
and social exclusion or inclusion. This volume offers readers a
better understanding of how politics and faith can be melded, both
in ancient and contemporary contexts, to serve the interests of
certain classes and societies, often at the expense of others.
A Feminist Companion to Tobit and Judith extends the work of the
hugely influential and respected Feminist Companion series, which
continues to set the standard for feminist approaches to the Hebrew
Bible and related texts. In the present volume Athalya Brenner-Idan
(with Helen Efthimiadis-Keith) draws together a range of scholarly
commentators and addresses the core issues relating to feminist
interpretations of the two texts at hand. The volume examines
attitudes to gender, identities, exile, social mores, beliefs,
clothing, food and drink, personal relationships, and biblical
reception. The contributors are: Beverly Bow and George
Nickelsburg, Athalya Brenner-Idan, Ora Brison, Helen
Efthimiadis-Keith, Renate Egger-Wenzel, Beate Ego, Emma England,
Jennifer Glancy, Jan Willem van Henten, Naomi Jacobs, Amy-Jill
Levine, Pamela Milne, and Barbara Schmitz.
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Qoheleth (Ecclesiastes) (Hardcover)
Lisa M. Wolfe; Edited by Barbara E Reid; Volume editing by Athalya Brenner-Idan
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R1,425
Discovery Miles 14 250
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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2021 Catholic Media Association Award third place award in academic
studies Qoheleth, also called Ecclesiastes, has been bad news for
women throughout history. In this commentary Lisa Wolfe offers
intriguing new possibilities for feminist interpretation of the
book's parts, including Qoheleth's most offensive passages, and as
a whole. Throughout her interpretation, Wolfe explores multiple
connections between this book and women of all times, from
investigating how the verbs in the time poem in 3:1-8 may relate to
biblical and contemporary women alike, to noting that if 11:1
indicates ancient beer making it thus reveals the women who made
the beer itself. In the end, Wolfe argues that, by struggling with
the perplexing text of Qoheleth, we may discover fruitful,
against-the-grain reading strategies for our own time.
This volume brings together disparate views about biblical texts in
the books of Samuel, Chronicles and Ezra-Nehemiah and examines
their influence in the life of contemporary communities,
demonstrating how today's environments and disorders help readers
to acquire new insights into such texts. The contributing scholars
hail from different continents - from East Asia to the United
States to Europe to South Africa and Israel - and count themselves
as members of various Jewish and Christian traditions or secularist
ways of life. But, in spite of their differences in location and
community membership, and perhaps in the spirit of the times (2020
and its global discontents), they share preoccupations with
questions of ethics in politics and life, 'proper' death, violence
and social exclusion or inclusion. This volume offers readers a
better understanding of how politics and faith can be melded, both
in ancient and contemporary contexts, to serve the interests of
certain classes and societies, often at the expense of others.
In this volume scholarly voices from diverse contexts and social
locations are gathered together to bring new or unfamiliar facets
of biblical texts to light, focusing on issues of intertextuality.
Samuel, Kings and Chronicles I sheds light from new perspectives on
themes in these so-called historical books including Asian American
and Chinese readings, issues of land, genealogy and maleness. The
authors challenge us to consider how we deal with cultural
distances between ourselves and these ancient writings - and
between one another in the contemporary world. These goal of these
essays is de-centre the often homogeneous first-world orientation
of much biblical scholarship and open to up new possibilities for
discovery of meaning and method.
The format of the new The Bible in the 21st Century series reflects
an international dialogue between experts and graduate students. In
this book, experts on Bible translations present essays on the
practices of translating the Bible for the present and the future,
through Christian and Jewish approaches, in Western Europe and
North America as well as in the former Eastern Bloc and in Africa.
Each paper is paired with a response. The international
contributors here include Adele Berlin, John Rogerson, Robert
Carroll, Mary Phil Korsak, Everett Fox, Jeremy Punt and Athalya
Brenner, and the debate is prefaced with an introduction by the
Editors.>
The authoritative status of 'Prophecy' in the Bible poses a
challenge to the feminist readers. This challenge is sharpened by
the widespread symbolism in prophetic discourse of woman, wife,
mother, harlot and the use of what the volume call
'pornoprophetics'. In this collection it is the book of Hosea that
attracts special attention, but there are also articles on sexual
violence and an introductory essay on prophecy itself as a literary
phenomenon. This Feminist Companion offers a sharp confrontation
between the voice of the prophetic male and the resistance of the
feminist reader.
Biblical humor about women and gender remains elusive for many
readers, for its recognition may imply the realization that it's a
cruel and disrespectful humor, ridicule rather than good-natured
fun. But viewing humor as social critique, as is largely done in
the essays in this volume, with respect to both the texts read and
their actual or implied author, may be fun as well as significant
for understanding the biblical worlds. As most of the essays show,
writing about women is writing about men as well. In other words,
it is writing about gender roles. The critique of women, womanhood
and femaleness implied by biblical and related texts serves, in
equal measure, as a critique of men, manhood and maleness in the
texts, of the texts authors, and of the texts' commentators and
readers. Contributors include Scott Spencer, Mary Shields, Kathleen
O'Connor, Toni Craven, Kathy Williams, Athalya Brenner, Gale Yee,
Amy-Jill Levine, and Esther Fuchs.
This collection of studies, reflecting developments in feminist
exegesis over the last few years in Europe and the United States,
includes treatments of key female figures ('Tamar and the Coat of
Many Colours' by Adrien Janis Bledstein; 'Michal, the Barren Wife'
by Lillian R. Klein; 'On Centering a Fringe Figure: The Wife of
Jeroboam in 1 Kings 14:1-18' by Uta Schmidt; 'The Widow of
Zarephath and the Great Woman of Shunem: A Comparative Analysis of
Two Stories' by Jopie Siebert-Hommes), and a new examination of a
biblical threesome, 'Saul, David and Jonathan: The Story of a
Triangle? A Contribution to the Issue of Homosexuality in the First
Testament' by Silvia Schroer and Thomas Staubli.
The second volume of the series takes up que stions of voice,
exclusion and construction as well as the r einforcement of the
world views that have a legacy of contin ued gender asymmetry in
Judaism and Christianity. '
The second series of Feminist Companions moves beyond the confines
of sex- and gender-specific issues and studies of biblical women.
Biblical feminist critics now address contemporary life situations,
marginalization and a range of questions once not thought
accessible to such critique. Feminist theory has also continued a
rapid evolution. Among the topics included in this volume are
composition, Torah, Ruth-the-Cat, female networking-together with
much else to inform and stimulate female (and male) biblical
scholars and non-scholars.
Since the publication of the first Genesis volume in The Feminist
Companion series in 1993, feminist scholars have become both
prolific and better recognized, and it has now become possible to
present a new volume on Genesis, consisting of recent unpublished
essays on the topic. The essays in this collection are grouped
under the headings 'Creation and Paradise Revisited',
'Mal�e�Practices' and 'Female Modes' and are written from
perspectives gleaned from disciplines such as psychology, art
history and art criticism, sociology, anthropology and literary
criticism. Some of the essays presented here constitute a dialogue
with earlier papers in the first Genesis companion, making the two
volumes an indispensable resource for reclaiming the female
heritage found in the book of Genesis.
This volume is part of a series which provides a fundamental
resource for feminist biblical scholarship, containing a
comprehensive selection of essays, both reprinted and specially
written for the series, by leading feminist scholars. The
contributors to this volume are Lyn Bechtel, Mark Bredin, Athalya
Brenner, Edna Brocke, Carole Fontaine, Lillian Klein, Amy-Jill
Levine, Judith Lieu, Heather McKay, Adele Reinhartz, Jane Schaberg,
Marla Selvidge, Leonore Siegele-Wenschkewitz, Beverly Stratton,
Arie Troost, Pieter van der Horst, and Bea Wyler. >
Provides feminist approaches to Wisdom Literature from leading
scholars of the Hebrew Bible and feminist hermeneutics. >
The authoritative status of 'Prophecy' in the Bible poses a
challenge to the feminist readers. This challenge is sharpened by
the widespread symbolism in prophetic discourse of woman, wife,
mother, harlot and the use of what the volume call
'pornoprophetics'. In this collection it is the book of Hosea that
attracts special attention, but there are also articles on sexual
violence and an introductory essay on prophecy itself as a literary
phenomenon. This Feminist Companion offers a sharp confrontation
between the voice of the prophetic male and the resistance of the
feminist reader.
Do we confront in these three characters feminist heroines or
patriarchally idealised stooges? From the worldly Esther to the
piously devout Susanna via the militant widow, these female figures
appear both as meticulously sculpted individuals.
A stimulating collection of studies by leading feminist scholars
offering radical readings of the Old Testament books of Samuel and
Kings. Although gender ideology may have been only a 'side issue'
for the writers of these texts, the articles in this collection
show that it is definitely a constituent of the general ideological
framework of this section of Israel's historiography, and they
explore the texts for women's lives, female voices, gendered types,
and the presence of women in the written history. As Athalya
Brenner states in her introduction to the volume, in looking at the
presentation of women and femaleness in Samuel and Kings we
'encounter chiefly relational images': women are seen as daughters,
mothers, queen mothers, and in their relations to kings and
prophets. >
This volume is part of a series which provides a fundamental
resource for feminist biblical scholarship, containing a
comprehensive selection of essays, both reprinted and specially
written for the series, by leading feminist scholars. The essays in
this volume deal with social status and female sexuality, the
textual figure of 'the daughter' and the character of Miriam. 'An
enterprising series of collections of important and pioneering
studies.... Those teaching feminist courses will find the books
invaluable as a resource for students' (C.S. Rodd, Expository
Times). >
The book of Judges is replete with female figurations, and has,
therefore, received a lot of attention from feminist critics. This
volume of essays, however, changes the motivation behind this
apparent centrality of female figures, claiming that in fact strong
androcentric premises underlie the texts. The overall theme of this
sparkling collection focusses on wives, daughters and mothers, and
their relationships. An introductory section surveys the women of
Judges, investigation satire, paradigm and deviation and the
midrashic sources; Brenner and Van Dyck investigate the story and
song of Deborah; Fuchs and Exum turn their attention to Jephthah's
daughter; Amit and Reinhartz look at women in the Samson story.
Finally, three essays, including one by Mieke Bal, deal with the
brutal finale of the book in chapters 19-21. >
This volume is part of a series which provides a fundamental
resource for feminist biblical scholarship, containing a
comprehensive selection of essays, both reprinted and specially
written for the series, by leading feminist scholars. 'An
enterprising series of collections of important and pioneering
studies.... Those teaching feminist courses will find the books
invaluable as a resource for students.' C.S. Rodd, Expository
Times.
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