The creative re-telling of biblical stories represents an important element of reception history, for texts take on new meanings in these generative contexts. This article explores the presentation of Sarah in an account of the Aqedah found in a fifth-century Syriac verse homily. The pseudonymous author features Sarah prominently, in particular her longing to commemorate Isaac after his apparent death. Here Sarah’s desires are specifically couched in the language of the cult of the saints, making her a model of late antique female piety. However, her activities are also restricted by the voice of Abraham, and she willingly concedes. I argue that the author of this homily presents Sarah as a model of female piety but also female subservience...
This dissertation is interested in the metaphorical construction of female figures in the Hebrew Bib...
This dissertation seeks to further develop the existing appreciation of the role of women around Jes...
The women of the Old Testament were not merely ancillary to the men. From the matriarchal era down t...
The creative re-telling of biblical stories represents an important element of reception history, fo...
This article analyses Philo of Alexandria's and Josephus Flavius's interpretations of Sarah from the...
This thesis investigates the dual roles that women played in the cult of the martyrs in Christianity...
The article refers to the findings of Kuntillet Ajrud (inscriptions and drawings) in which, accordin...
Sarah, the wife of Abraham and the mother of Isaac in Genesis, is a central biblical character becau...
In 1 Peter 3:5-6 the author of First Peter refers to the holy women of the past who were submissive ...
Ekklesiastikos Pharos is also a mouthpiece of the South African Association for Patristic and Byzant...
In the early Christian East, as now, dress indicated conformity or noncon-formity to social norms, p...
Widows appear in every genre of biblical text, and yet there has been little research into the way i...
This thesis centers on the study of Muslim women’s piety in the medieval period. Specifically, I exa...
The established interpretations of four biblical narratives--Lot's daughters, Tamar, Ruth and Bathsh...
Scholars have claimed that women played a pivotal role in what is often called “the Christianization...
This dissertation is interested in the metaphorical construction of female figures in the Hebrew Bib...
This dissertation seeks to further develop the existing appreciation of the role of women around Jes...
The women of the Old Testament were not merely ancillary to the men. From the matriarchal era down t...
The creative re-telling of biblical stories represents an important element of reception history, fo...
This article analyses Philo of Alexandria's and Josephus Flavius's interpretations of Sarah from the...
This thesis investigates the dual roles that women played in the cult of the martyrs in Christianity...
The article refers to the findings of Kuntillet Ajrud (inscriptions and drawings) in which, accordin...
Sarah, the wife of Abraham and the mother of Isaac in Genesis, is a central biblical character becau...
In 1 Peter 3:5-6 the author of First Peter refers to the holy women of the past who were submissive ...
Ekklesiastikos Pharos is also a mouthpiece of the South African Association for Patristic and Byzant...
In the early Christian East, as now, dress indicated conformity or noncon-formity to social norms, p...
Widows appear in every genre of biblical text, and yet there has been little research into the way i...
This thesis centers on the study of Muslim women’s piety in the medieval period. Specifically, I exa...
The established interpretations of four biblical narratives--Lot's daughters, Tamar, Ruth and Bathsh...
Scholars have claimed that women played a pivotal role in what is often called “the Christianization...
This dissertation is interested in the metaphorical construction of female figures in the Hebrew Bib...
This dissertation seeks to further develop the existing appreciation of the role of women around Jes...
The women of the Old Testament were not merely ancillary to the men. From the matriarchal era down t...