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Claiming Her Dignity

Female Resistance in the Old Testament

Claiming Her Dignity

Female Resistance in the Old Testament

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Paperback / softback

£15.99

Publisher: Liturgical Press
ISBN: 9780814684191
Number of Pages: 192
Published: 06/10/2016
Width: 15.2 cm
Height: 22.9 cm
To be human means to resist dehumanization. In the darkest periods of human history, men and women have risen up and in many different voices said this one thing: “Do not treat me like this. Treat me like the human being that I am.” Claiming Her Dignity explores a number of stories from the Old Testament in which women in a variety of creative ways resist the violence of war, rape, heterarchy, and poverty. Amid the life-denying circumstances that seek to attack, violate, and destroy the bodies and psyches of women, men, and children, the women featured in this book absolutely refuse to succumb to the explicit, and at times subtle but no less harmful, manifestations of violence that they face.

Contents
Acknowledgments   ix
Introduction   xiii
Chapter 1. Resisting the Violence of War   1
     1.  Understanding Collective Violence   1
     2.  Rizpah’s Lament (2 Samuel 21)   4
     3.   Abigail’s Hospitality (1 Samuel 25)   17
     4. Rizpah’s and Abigails of “These Modern Days”   31
Chapter 2. Resisting the Violence of Rape   34
     1.  The Terrorizing Reality of Rape   34
     2.  Tamar’s Cry (2 Samuel 13)   38
     3.  Susanna’s Prayer   50
     4.  A World without Rape   64
Chapter 3. Resisting the Violence of Patriarchy Heterarchy   67
     1.  From Patriarchy to Heterarchy   67
     2   The Daughter of Jephthah’s Elegy (Judges 11)   71
     3.  The Daughters of Zelophehad’s Resolve (Numbers 27)   84
     4.  Smashing Patriarchy?   99
Chapter 4. Resisting the Violence of Precarity   102
     1.  Poverty as the Worst Form of Violence   102
     2.  Hagar’s Tears (Genesis 16, 21) /  Sarah’s Laughter (Genesis 18, 21)   106
     3.  Ruth, Naomi, and Tamar’s Resilience   121
     4.  Transforming Narratives, Transforming Communities   133
Conclusion   137
     1.  Telling Stories   137
     2.  Memory   139
     3.  Salvation   141
     4.  Agency   144
     5.  Complexity   148
     6.  Hope   151
Postscript   153
Author and Subject Index   157
Scripture Index   163

L. Juliana M. Claassens

Prof. Juliana Claassens is currently professor in Old Testament with a focus on human dignity at the Faculty of Theology, Stellenbosch University, South Africa. Prior to this, she studied and taught in the United States for thirteen years. She is the author of Mourner, Mother, Midwife: Reimagining God’s Liberating Presence (Westminster John Knox, 2012) and The God who Provides: Biblical Images of Divine Nourishment (Abingdon, 2004).

"Claiming Her Dignity introduces us to fourteen biblical women who bravely responded to the violent evils of war, rape, systemic injustice, and poverty in seemingly small but effective and creative acts of nonviolent resistance and in the process retained their dignity and agency as full human beings. Claassens brilliantly demonstrates how the complex, realistic, and hopeful accounts of these ancient biblical women continue to reverberate in the stories of women and other marginalized people in our world today. Highly recommended!"Dennis Olson, Charles T. Haley Professor of Old Testament Theology, Princeton Theological Seminary "This is a superb resource for those seeking to engage oppression, precarity, and trauma in biblical texts and in contemporary communities. Using the stories of Jephthah's daughter, Abigail, Ruth, Susannah, and more, Claassens highlights women's creativity and resilience in situations of systemic inequity and interpersonal brutality. Sophisticated gender analysis is combined here with unflinching attention to violence in its many forms. Claassens's exploration of strategies of resistance makes this book essential reading for those interested in biblical ethics and feminist approaches to Scripture."The Rev. Dr. Carolyn J. Sharp, Professor of Hebrew Scriptures, Yale Divinity School "Claassens has given a voice to women who have struggled throughout biblical times against persecution, and marginalization, as varying forms of patriarchy, kyriarchy, and/or heterarchy. She defines these terms and how they attempted to keep women from voicing their resistance in stories of the old testament. This is an important book for us to more deeply understand these old testament women and their extensive struggles."Catholic Press Association award, third place in gender issues category "A tour de force of exegesis, pastoral application, use of literary and sociological theory, Claiming Her Dignity takes its place as both a worthy descendant of Trible's Texts of Terror and the opening of new avenues for feminist, womanist, and postcolonial readings of the Hebrew Bible. Claassens retrieves and animates a powerful but overlooked biblical ethic of resistance that exposes our ideologies of violence and challenges us to rise above them. At once a deep engagement with the biblical text and a dialogue with a wide range of thinkers from across a stunning array of disciplines, this book has something to teach pastors, academics, and students."Thomas Bolin, St. Norbert College "This challenging book offers a message of hope not just for women but for anyone who struggles to understand and respond to persistent and dehumanizing violence."John R. Barker, OFM, The Bible Today "C.'s exegesis is peerless and her observations are well articulated from the perspective of contemporary feminist interpretation. This up-to-date discussion will be of interest to academics and clergy alike."Elizabeth Russell Hayes, Journal for the Study of the Old Testament "The monograph is `the next step' in feminist studies of women characters in the Old Testament. Its scholarship is solid and can lead the reader to a greater appreciation of the existence, function and importance of resistance in both overt and covert situations of hierarchical domination. Its potential audience is broad, a manageable read that I heartily recommend to readers of this review."Alice L. Laffey, Catholic Books Review "A worthwhile resource for those who wish to engage with violence of any kind against women and seek strategies of response and interpretation."M.L. Case, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, Horizons in Biblical Theology