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The power of equivocation : complex readers and readings of the Hebrew Bible / Amy Kalmanofsky.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: Minneapolis : Fortress Press, 2022Copyright date: ©2022Description: 170 pages ; 23 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 1506478719
  • 9781506478715
Subject(s):
Contents:
Equivocal readings of the Hebrew Bible: an introduction from an equivocal reader -- Potiphar's wife and Joseph -- Hannah -- Saul, Samuel, Hannah, and the woman from En-dor -- Esther and Mordecai -- Tamar and Judah -- Bathsheba, David, and Solomon -- Unequivocal conclusions from an equivocal reader.
Summary: The Power of Equivocation reveals the complexity inherent in biblical narratives, particularly those featuring female characters, and models a way of reading that enables critical-religious interpreters to straddle their dual identities and loyalties and read the Bible critically, generously, and honestly.
Holdings
Item type Home library Collection Call number Materials specified Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Adult Book Adult Book Main Library NonFiction 221.9 K14 Available 33111010909832
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

In The Power of Equivocation Amy Kalmanofsky addresses the Bible's inherent complexity as well as the complexity of those who seek to read the Bible critically, generously, and honestly.

The Bible invites what Kalmanofsky identifies as equivocal readings--readings that do not reach neat conclusions related to ideology or character. Kalmanofsky demonstrates the Bible's complicated artistry through her close readings of six biblical narratives that feature women: she examines culpability in the story of Joseph and Potiphar's wife and shows how the Bible presents neither figure as a hero or villain; considers how the Bible's portrayal of Hannah both conforms to and also defies the Bible's patriarchal norms; how the Bible affords the rejected King Saul compassion and respect through a powerful yet unlawful medium from En-Dor; how Queen Esther overpowers men to become the equivocal hero of her eponymous book; how Tamar in Genesis 38, like Hannah, conforms to and challenges the Bible's patriarchal norms and how, like Esther, she is the equivocal hero of her story; and how the Bible presents Bathsheba as a complicated figure, both vulnerable and powerful.

Kalmanofsky draws from the challenges she personally feels as a feminist, as a Jew, and as a scholar to argue that equivocal readers like herself are best equipped to see the Bible's complex artistry. Equivocal feminist-religious readers are suspicious and generous readers who can expose the ways in which biblical texts empower and disempower women and who can provide essential insight about the Bible's theology and ideology.

Through her close readings, Kalmanofsky models what it means to be equivocal readers of an equivocal Bible. The Power of Equivocation is marked by honesty and the celebration of a text that can never be read just one way.

Includes bibliographical references and indexes.

Equivocal readings of the Hebrew Bible: an introduction from an equivocal reader -- Potiphar's wife and Joseph -- Hannah -- Saul, Samuel, Hannah, and the woman from En-dor -- Esther and Mordecai -- Tamar and Judah -- Bathsheba, David, and Solomon -- Unequivocal conclusions from an equivocal reader.

The Power of Equivocation reveals the complexity inherent in biblical narratives, particularly those featuring female characters, and models a way of reading that enables critical-religious interpreters to straddle their dual identities and loyalties and read the Bible critically, generously, and honestly.

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