I Am . . .: Biblical Women Tell Their Own StoriesFortress Press - 228 pages Athalya Brenner presents fictionalized "autobiographies" of a dozen women and women groups in the Hebrew Bible, and also lets them share a conversation session. This allows her to include how these women have been interpreted - not only in the Bible itself, but also in Jewish and Christian traditions and by modern commentators. The result is a thoroughly engaging and insightful look at women, from a leading biblical interpreter who has a very creative edge to all her work. |
Contents
Prior to Touchdown | 1 |
ONE War Culture WivesMothers from A to | 9 |
Dinah | 25 |
Zipporah | 58 |
Rizpah Daughter of Ayah | 120 |
We Are Tamar and Tamar | 133 |
I Am Zeruiah | 147 |
Huldah the Prophet | 155 |
Am an Anonymous Woman from | 163 |
Am the Convener | 191 |
THIRTEEN Goodbye | 211 |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Abner Absalom academic Adah Adah and Zillah Amnon Arab Athalya attributed beauty biblical story biblical text biblical women Bird Woman birth Boaz brothers Canaanite chapter claim commentators conventional culture dance daughter David desire Dinah divine Exodus father feminist gender Genesis Rabbah Hebrew bible Huldah humor husband imagine interpretation Islamic Israel Israeli Israelites Jacob Jerusalem Jewish sages Joseph Josephus Flavius Judah killed king Lamech land later Leah least listen literary look lover Madam Potiphar male marriage married maternal mentioned metaphorical midrash Midrash Samuel Mishnah Moses mother motivation Na'amah Naomi never night NRSV once Orpah perhaps Podarge poem political Potiphar prophets rabbis Rachel Rahab rape Rashi readers retelling Rizpah Ruth Samuel Saul Saul's scholarly scholars sexual Shechem Sheffield Sheherazade Shulammit sister Song of Songs sons sources Spikkeltje Tamar Tchernichowsky tell there's voice wasf wife wish Yhwh Zeruiah Zillah Zipporah