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Song of Songs (Hardcover)
F. Scott Spencer; Edited by Barbara E Reid; Volume editing by Lauress Wilkins Lawrence; Contributions by Debra Band, Lindsay Andreolli-Comstock, …
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R1,421
Discovery Miles 14 210
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Arguably the biggest blockbuster love song ever composed, the Song
of Songs holds a unique place in Jewish and Christian canons as the
"holiest" book, in the minds of some readers, and the sexiest in
its language and imagery. This commentary aims to interpret this
vibrant Song in a contemporary feminist key, informed by close
linguistic-literary and social-cultural analysis. Though finding
much in the Song to celebrate for women (and men) in their
embodied, passionate lives, this work also exposes tensions,
vulnerabilities, and inequities between the sexes and among society
at large-just what we would expect of a perceptive, poignant love
ballad that still tops the charts. From the Wisdom Commentary
series Feminist biblical interpretation has reached a level of
maturity that now makes possible a commentary series on every book
of the Bible. It is our hope that Wisdom Commentary, by making the
best of current feminist biblical scholarship available in an
accessible format to ministers, preachers, teachers, scholars, and
students, will aid all readers in their advancement toward God's
vision of dignity, equality, and justice for all. The aim of this
commentary is to provide feminist interpretation of Scripture in
serious, scholarly engagement with the whole text, not only those
texts that explicitly mention women. A central concern is the world
in front of the text, that is, how the text is heard and
appropriated by women. At the same time, this commentary aims to be
faithful to the ancient text, to explicate the world behind the
text, where appropriate, and not impose contemporary questions onto
the ancient texts. The commentary addresses not only issues of
gender (which are primary in this project) but also those of power,
authority, ethnicity, racism, and classism, which all intersect.
Each volume incorporates diverse voices and differing
interpretations from different parts of the world, showing the
importance of social location in the process of interpretation and
that there is no single definitive feminist interpretation of a
text.
Comedy is both relative, linked to a time and culture, and
universal, found pervasively across time and culture. The Hebrew
Bible contains comedy of this relative, yet universal nature.
Melissa A. Jackson engages the Hebrew Bible via a comic reading and
brings that reading into conversation with feminist-critical
interpretation, in resistance to any lingering stereotype that
comedy is fundamentally non-serious or that feminist critique is
fundamentally unsmiling.
Dividing comic elements into categories of literary devices,
psychological/social features, and psychological/social function,
Jackson examines the narratives of a number of biblical characters
for evidence of these comic elements. The characters include the
trickster matriarchs, the women involved in the infancy of Moses,
Rahab, Deborah and Jael, Delilah, three of David's wives (Michal,
Abigail, Bathsheba), Jezebel, Ruth, and Esther. Nine particularly
instructive points of contact between comedy and feminist
interpretation emerge: both (1) resist definition, (2) exist amidst
a self/other, subject/object dichotomy, (3) emphasise and utilise
context, (4) promote creativity, (5) acknowledge the concept of
distancing, (6) work towards revelation, (7) are subversive, (8)
are concerned with containment and control, and (9) enable
survival. The use of comedy as an interpretive lens for the Hebrew
Bible is not without difficulties for feminist interpretation.
While maintaining an uncomfortable, even painful, awareness of the
hold patriarchy retains on the Hebrew Bible, feminist critics can
still choose to allow comedy's revelatory, subversive, survivalist
nature to do its work revealing, subverting, and surviving.
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