Women, Seduction, and Betrayal in Biblical Narrative
This accessible, readable book looks at the cultural study of the Bible, challenging the traditional mode of reading the women in the Bible. Alice Bach applies literary theory, cultural representations of biblical figures, films, and paintings to a close reading of a group of biblical texts revolving around the 'wicked' literary figures in the Bible. She compares the biblical character of the wife of Potiphar with the Second Temple Period narratives and rabbinic midrashim that expand her story. She then reads Bathsheba against a Yiddish novel by David Pinski, and finally looks at the Biblical Salome against a very different Salome created by Oscar Wilde, and the selection of Salomes created by Hollywood. Bach argues that biblical characters have a life in the mind of the reader independent of the stories in which they were created, thus making the reader the site at which the texts and the cultures that produced them come together.
- Challenges the traditional methods of studying the Bible by its application of cultural theories
- Written in a clear and lively prose style, free from jargon
- Combines literary theory, close readings of biblical texts, cultural representations of biblical figures, films, paintings etc. in order to break through the traditional mode of reading the women in the Bible
Product details
September 1997Paperback
9780521475600
312 pages
217 × 140 × 18 mm
0.385kg
4 b/w illus.
Available
Table of Contents
- List of illustrations
- Acknowledgemetns
- 1. Signs of the flesh
- 2. Contending with the narrator
- 3. A story of reading the story of Genesis 39
- 4. 'I shall stir up thy mistress against thee'
- 5. Signs of her flesh
- 6. Wine, women and death
- 7. Calling the shots: directing Salomé's dance of death
- Bibliography
- Index of references
- General index.