Sarah: Mother of Nations
Autor Professor Tammi J. Schneideren Limba Engleză Paperback – 31 dec 2004
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780826416254
ISBN-10: 082641625X
Pagini: 160
Dimensiuni: 152 x 226 x 13 mm
Greutate: 0.27 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Continuum
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 082641625X
Pagini: 160
Dimensiuni: 152 x 226 x 13 mm
Greutate: 0.27 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Continuum
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
'In just over 120 pages this is quite a tour de force, but the author manages to keep her readers' attention through clearly structured chapters which ultimately invite us to take another look at those familiar stories ourselves.' 'This is a small and relatively specialized book, but it is an important contribution to feminist hermeneutics and to biblical scholarship in general.' Epworth Review
mention of book
"This is a small and relatively specialized book, but it is an important contribution to feminist hermeneutics and to biblical scholarship in general. It shows that much more work is needed by feminist scholars in terms of commentating on the actual text. It indicates that feminist hermeneutics has an important contribution to make to the rereading of those texts which have shaped our thinking of what it means to be children of Abraham." - Epworth Review
"This feminist literary study focuses on the importance of Israel's first matriarch, and recognizes her neglect by many biblical scholars. Sarah laughed when God promised her a child at age ninety and she would certainly smile at Tammi Schneider's ability to give her back her rightful place in biblical history."--Naomi Steinberg, DePaul University
Schneider's provocative study prompts readers to rethink many of our assumptions concerning the matriarch, Sarah. Her probing narrative analysis challenges past portrayals of Sarah as the petulant and short-sighted wife of the founding patriarch of biblical tradition who so frequently stands as an obstacle to the establishment of the covenant between G-d and Abraham. Instead, Schneider argues that G-d chooses Sarah just as surely as Abraham, and that Sarah must be recognized for her key role in establishing the covenant between G-d and Israel. Her study has important implications for rethinking the role of women in relation to our understandings of biblical covenant in both Judaism and Christianity. Marvin A. Sweeney Professor of Hebrew Bible, Claremont School of Theology Professor of Religion, Claremont Graduate University Board Chair and Chief Executive Officer, Ancient Biblical Manuscript Center for Preservation and Reseach, Claremont
"Schneider hasn't discovered some long-lost archaeological treasure or extrabiblical text. She works with the same raw material, the same Masoretic Hebrew text that biblical scholars have had all along. But she takes every sentence and sits with it, thinks about it, turns it this way and that, considering everything with an eye toward what it says of Sarah. And what seems almost magical is the way the character of Sarah emerges from Schneider's painstaking labors. Schneider also does a masterful job of opening up a variety of interpretive possibilities. Without trivializing the importance of seeking answers, she helps the reader see the many places where there is simply no way to definitively choose among the available options. Equally important, she helps us see that the Bible doesn't necessarily portray figures like Abraham as moral paragons, despite what we might recall from childhood Bible stories or even what we might gather from parts of the Christian Scriptures. Perhaps the most important lesson of this book for Friends is the opportunity it affords to participate in a genuine, informed "close reading" of some important Hebrew Scriptual stories. Schneider ends up seeing Sarah (and Abraham) in quite a different light from most commentaries...Schneider's book is a worthy conversation partner in our sitting with the text as we sit with one another, "waiting on the Lord" and a fresh Word of the Spirit" - Friends Journal, November 2005
mention of book
"This is a small and relatively specialized book, but it is an important contribution to feminist hermeneutics and to biblical scholarship in general. It shows that much more work is needed by feminist scholars in terms of commentating on the actual text. It indicates that feminist hermeneutics has an important contribution to make to the rereading of those texts which have shaped our thinking of what it means to be children of Abraham." - Epworth Review
"This feminist literary study focuses on the importance of Israel's first matriarch, and recognizes her neglect by many biblical scholars. Sarah laughed when God promised her a child at age ninety and she would certainly smile at Tammi Schneider's ability to give her back her rightful place in biblical history."--Naomi Steinberg, DePaul University
Schneider's provocative study prompts readers to rethink many of our assumptions concerning the matriarch, Sarah. Her probing narrative analysis challenges past portrayals of Sarah as the petulant and short-sighted wife of the founding patriarch of biblical tradition who so frequently stands as an obstacle to the establishment of the covenant between G-d and Abraham. Instead, Schneider argues that G-d chooses Sarah just as surely as Abraham, and that Sarah must be recognized for her key role in establishing the covenant between G-d and Israel. Her study has important implications for rethinking the role of women in relation to our understandings of biblical covenant in both Judaism and Christianity. Marvin A. Sweeney Professor of Hebrew Bible, Claremont School of Theology Professor of Religion, Claremont Graduate University Board Chair and Chief Executive Officer, Ancient Biblical Manuscript Center for Preservation and Reseach, Claremont
"Schneider hasn't discovered some long-lost archaeological treasure or extrabiblical text. She works with the same raw material, the same Masoretic Hebrew text that biblical scholars have had all along. But she takes every sentence and sits with it, thinks about it, turns it this way and that, considering everything with an eye toward what it says of Sarah. And what seems almost magical is the way the character of Sarah emerges from Schneider's painstaking labors. Schneider also does a masterful job of opening up a variety of interpretive possibilities. Without trivializing the importance of seeking answers, she helps the reader see the many places where there is simply no way to definitively choose among the available options. Equally important, she helps us see that the Bible doesn't necessarily portray figures like Abraham as moral paragons, despite what we might recall from childhood Bible stories or even what we might gather from parts of the Christian Scriptures. Perhaps the most important lesson of this book for Friends is the opportunity it affords to participate in a genuine, informed "close reading" of some important Hebrew Scriptual stories. Schneider ends up seeing Sarah (and Abraham) in quite a different light from most commentaries...Schneider's book is a worthy conversation partner in our sitting with the text as we sit with one another, "waiting on the Lord" and a fresh Word of the Spirit" - Friends Journal, November 2005