Let Her Speak for Herself
Editat de Marion Ann Taylor, Heather E. Weiren Limba Engleză Paperback – 30 sep 2006
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781932792539
ISBN-10: 1932792538
Pagini: 513
Ilustrații: Illustrations
Dimensiuni: 151 x 229 x 40 mm
Greutate: 0.85 kg
Editura: Baylor University Press
ISBN-10: 1932792538
Pagini: 513
Ilustrații: Illustrations
Dimensiuni: 151 x 229 x 40 mm
Greutate: 0.85 kg
Editura: Baylor University Press
Recenzii
This remarkable volume not only fills a painful lacuna in the history of biblical interpretation, but it opens up a new field within the discipline by recovering hundreds of forgotten female voices. I am confident that this volume will serve as an important catalyst to subsequent generations who will be stimulated to pursue a gripping subject matter still largely unexplored. Brevard S. Childs, Sterling Professor of Divinity Emeritus, Yale University
An invaluable collection of rare primary sources. Taylor and Weir's introductions to the authors and summarizing analyses enhance the significance of this book for the history of biblical interpretation, women's studies, and nineteenth century cultural history. Katharine Doob Sakenfeld, Eisenberger Professor of Old Testament, Princeton Theological Seminary
It is hard to imagine that anyone could discover a genuinely fresh approach to modern biblical interpretation, yet Taylor and Weir have done just that. At the same time, they offer new insight into the life, learning, and thinking of nineteenth-century women, both Jews and Christians. Their careful work will benefit scholars and students of modern history, biblical studies, and women's studies. Ellen Davis, Duke Divinity School
This is at once an exciting book to plunge into and a treasure-trove to be explored at leisure. The result of prodigious research and meticulous attention to detail, the book also succeeds in being highly accessible and delightfully engaging. Taylor and Weir induct us sympathetically into the various social worlds of the women and their readers and help us to appreciate the way writers, readers, and historical context are bound together, so that interpreting the Bible is seen to be a living process. This remarkable book is suited to a wide audience and will be a great resource for college or seminary courses. David M. Gunn, Texas Christian University
An invaluable collection of rare primary sources. Taylor and Weir's introductions to the authors and summarizing analyses enhance the significance of this book for the history of biblical interpretation, women's studies, and nineteenth century cultural history. Katharine Doob Sakenfeld, Eisenberger Professor of Old Testament, Princeton Theological Seminary
It is hard to imagine that anyone could discover a genuinely fresh approach to modern biblical interpretation, yet Taylor and Weir have done just that. At the same time, they offer new insight into the life, learning, and thinking of nineteenth-century women, both Jews and Christians. Their careful work will benefit scholars and students of modern history, biblical studies, and women's studies. Ellen Davis, Duke Divinity School
This is at once an exciting book to plunge into and a treasure-trove to be explored at leisure. The result of prodigious research and meticulous attention to detail, the book also succeeds in being highly accessible and delightfully engaging. Taylor and Weir induct us sympathetically into the various social worlds of the women and their readers and help us to appreciate the way writers, readers, and historical context are bound together, so that interpreting the Bible is seen to be a living process. This remarkable book is suited to a wide audience and will be a great resource for college or seminary courses. David M. Gunn, Texas Christian University
Cuprins
Preface Introduction Part 1: Eve-The Mother of Us All §1 Hannah Mather Crocker Observations on the Real Rights of Women (1818) §2 Lucy Barton Bible Letters for Children (1832) §3 Esther Hewlett Copley Scripture History for Youth (1833) and Scripture Biography (1835) §4 Favell Lee Mortimer The Peep of Day (1833) §5 Sarah Moore Grimké Letters on the Equality of the Sexes, and the Condition of Woman (1838) §6 Angelina Emily Grimké Weld Letters to Catherine Beecher (1838) §7 Catherine Hunt Putnam The Gospel by Moses, in the Book of Genesis; or, the Old Testament Unveiled (1854) §8 E. C. C. Baillie The Protoplast (1853) §9 Cecil Frances (Fanny) Alexander "The Temptation" (1854) §10 Sophia Goodrich Ashton The Mothers of the Bible (1855) §11 Christina Georgina Rossetti "Eve" (1866) and "A Helpmeet for Him" (1888) §12 Charlotte Maria Tucker (A.L.O.E.) House Beautiful (1868) §13 Sarah Town Martyn Women of the Bible (1868) §14 Elizabeth Rundle Charles Sketches of the Women of Christendom (1880) §15 Etty Woosnam The Women of the Bible: Old Testament (1881) §16 Ray Frank "Women in the Synagogue" (1894) §17 Henriette Greenebaum Frank "Modern Jewish Women" (1894) §18 Julia Wedgwood The Message of Israel in the Light of Modern Criticism (1894) §19 Lillie Devereux Blake The Woman's Bible (1895) §20 Elizabeth Baxter The Women of the Word (1897) Conclusion Part 2: Sarah-The First Mother of Israel §21 Sarah Trimmer A Help to the Unlearned in the Study of the Holy Scriptures (1805) §22 Frances Elizabeth King Female Scripture Characters: Exemplifying Female Virtues (1813) §23 Sarah Ewing Hall Conversations on the Bible (1818) §24 Grace Aguilar The Women of Israel (1845) §25 Rebekah Hyneman "Sarah" (1846) §26 Elizabeth Fries Ellet Family Pictures from the Bible (1849) §27 Catherine Hunt Putnam The Gospel by Moses in the Book of Genesis (1854) §28 Sophia Goodrich Ashton The Mothers of the Bible (1855) §29 Harriet Beecher Stowe Women in Sacred History (1873) §30 Etty Woosnam The Women of the Bible: Old Testament (1881) §31 Julia Wedgwood The Message of Israel in the Light of Modern Criticism (1894) §32 Clara Bewick Colby The Woman's Bible (1895) §33 Elizabeth Baxter The Women in the Word (1897) Conclusion Part 3: Hagar-The Wanderer §34 Sarah Trimmer A Help to the Unlearned (1805) §35 Sarah Hall Conversations on the Bible (1818) §36 Grace Aguilar "The Wanderers" (1838) §37 Penina Moise "Genesis, Chap. XXI" (1842) §38 Susan Warner Walks from Eden (1866) §39 Charlotte Maria Tucker (A.L.O.E.) House Beautiful (1868) §40 Sarah Town Martyn Women of the Bible (1868) §41 Harriet Beecher Stowe Women in Sacred History (1873) and Footsteps of the Master (1877) §42 Etty Woosnam The Women of the Bible: Old Testament (1881) §43 Mary Elizabeth Beck Bible Readings on Bible Women (1892) §44 Harriet Morton From the Beginning or Stories from Genesis (1893) §45 M. G. Women like Ourselves (1893) §46 Josephine Elizabeth Butler The Lady of Shunem (1894) §47 Sarah Elizabeth Turnock The Women of the Bible (1898) §48 Eloise Alberta Bibb "The Expulsion of Hagar" (1895) §49 Mary L. T. Witter Angels (1900) Conclusion Part 4: Rebekah-Mother of Two Nations §50 Frances Elizabeth King Female Scripture Characters; Exemplifying Female Virtues (1813) §51 Lady Morgan Woman and Her Master (1840) §52 Grace Aguilar The Women of Israel (1845) §53 Cecil Frances (Fanny) Alexander "Isaac and Rebekah" (1854) §54 Sarah Hale Woman's Record (1855) §55 Susan Warner Walks from Eden (1866) §56 Etty Woosnam The Women of the Bible: Old Testament (1881) §57 Elizabeth Julia Hasell Bible Partings (1883) §58 Mary L. T. Witter The Edomites (1888) §59 Mary Elizabeth Beck Bible Readings on Bible Women (1892) §60 M.G. Women Like Ourselves (1893) §61 Ada Ruth Habershon The Study of the Types (1898) Conclusion Part 5: Leah and Rachel-Founder of the House of Israel §62 Adelaide O'Keeffe Patriarchal Times (1811) §63 Mary Cornwallis Observations, Critical, Explanatory, and Practical on the Canonical Scriptures (1817) §64 Sarah Hall Conversations on the Bible (1818) §65 Grace Aguilar The Women of Israel (1845) §66 Clara Lucas Balfour The Women of Scripture (1847) §67 Sarah Hale Woman's Record (1855) §68 Constance and Annie de Rothschild The History and Literature of the Israelites (1870) §69 Harriet Beecher Stowe Women in Sacred History (1873) §70 Leigh Norval Women of the Bible (1889) §71 M. G. Women Like Ourselves (1893) §72 Elizabeth Baxter The Woman in the Word (1897) §73 Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Clara Bewick Colby The Woman's Bible (1895) Conclusion Part 6: Lot's Wife and Daughters, Dinah, Tamar, Potiphar's Wife-The Other Women of Genesis Lot's Wife and Daughters §74 Sarah Trimmer A Help to the Unlearned in the Study of the Holy Scriptures (1805) §75 Mary Cornwallis Observations, Critical, Explanatory, and Practical on the Canonical Scriptures (1817) §76 Sarah Ewing Hall Conversations on the Bible (1818) §77 Eliza Smith The Battles of the Bible (1852) §78 Sophia Goodrich Ashton The Mothers of the Bible (1877) §79 Charlotte Mary Yonge Young Folks' Bible History (1880) §80 Etty Woosnam The Women of the Bible: Old Testament (1881) §81 Mrs. Donaldson Home Duties for Wives and Mothers, Illustrated by Women of Scripture (1882) Dinah §82 Sarah Trimmer A Help to the Unlearned in the Study of the Holy Scriptures (1805) §83 Mary Cornwallis Observations, Critical, Explanatory, and Practical on the Canonical Scriptures (1817) §84 Sarah Hale Woman's Record (1855) §85 M. G. Women Like Ourselves (1893) Tamar §86 Sarah Trimmer A Help to the Unlearned in the Study of Holy Scripture (1805) §87 Mary Cornwallis Observations, Critical, Explanatory, and Practical on the Canonical Scriptures (1817) §88 Sarah Hale Woman's Record (1855) Potiphar's Wife §89 Mary Cornwallis Observations, Critical, Explanatory, and Practical on the Canonical Scriptures (1817) §90 Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lillie Devereux Blake The Woman's Bible (1895) Conclusion Conclusion Bibliography Subject Index Scripture Index