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Good, the Bold, and the Beautiful

The Story of Susanna and its Renaissance Interpretations

Good, the Bold, and the Beautiful

The Story of Susanna and its Renaissance Interpretations

This item is a print on demand title and will be dispatched in 1-3 weeks.

Hardback

£170.00

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
ISBN: 9780567029911
Number of Pages: 222
Published: 01/05/2006
The story of Susanna and the Elders is one of the most interpreted and reproduced tales from the "Apocrypha". In its compact narrative, it touches on attempted rape, female sexuality, abuse of power, punishment for the wicked, and voyeurism. "The Good, the Bold, the Beautiful" argues that the story of Susanna was written in the first century BCE, and Clanton provides a brief description of that century. He performs a narrative-rhetorical reading of Susanna, and illustrates that the story uses sexual anxiety and desire to set up a moral dilemma for Susanna. That moral dilemma is resolved in two ways: Susanna's refusal to allow herself to be raped, and Daniel's intervention. Clanton argues that although the story has many mimetic features, it is the thematic function that is overriding, especially after Daniel's appearance. Put another way, the story's emphasis on Susanna, the Elders, and Daniel as "plausible people" is secondary to its stress on what those characters represent and the message it is relaying through those representations. Clanton analyzes chronologically selected aesthetic interpretations of the story found in the Renaissance. He shows that the prevailing artistic interpretation during the Renaissance focused on the mimetic, sexual aspects of the story because it deals with issues of patronage, and sex/gender that were current at the time. "The Good, the Bold, the Beautiful" argues that several Renaissance renderings provide counter readings that focus more on the value and themes in the story. These renderings provide models for readers to resist the sexually exploitative features of both the narrative and its interpretations. Clanton reflects on the need for the reader to resist potentially harmful interpretation, especially those that focus on the mimetic level of the story's rhetoric.
Chapter One: Introduction; Chapter Two: Context(s) and (Re)Dating the Story of Susanna; Chapter Three: A Narrative-Rhetorical Reading of Susanna; Chapter Four: The Renaissance and Women; Chapter Five: The Standard Depiction of Susanna during the Renaissance; Chapter Six: Counterreadings of Susanna during the Renaissance; Chapter Seven: Conclusion.

Dan W. Clanton, Jr.

Dan W. Clanton Jr. is Lecturer in Religious Studies at the University of Denver.

Review in International Review of Biblical Studies, vol. 54:2007/08

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