Deuteronomy 22:5 has sparked much interest and wonder for both readers and interpreters of the Bible, throughout Jewish history. Divided into three parts, the verse reads as follows: "A woman should not have keli gever (man's apparel, utensil or tool) on her; a man should not wear simlat isha (a woman's dress, robe, mantle, tunic); anyone who does these things is an abomination to the Lord your God." Each part of the verse has raised questions among exegetes, like how to define its key terms simlat isha and keli gever and what is the nature of the abomination. This thesis explores the responses to these questions through a presentation of the Jewish exegetical history of Deut. 22:5 from biblical times to the present. It demonstrate...
Gender discrimination is not a new phenomenon. It has been prevalent in many civilisations through t...
Although the question whether women in Israel were also allowed to present offerings stands in accor...
This longitudinal and comparative study explores the nature and development of rabbinic thought on i...
The book of Deuteronomy in the Hebrew Bible contains an extensive list of laws, from cultic regulati...
Deut 22:5 marks the single instance of a prohibition of transvestitism in the Bible, and in its whol...
This article deals with explicit permissions for two types of cross-dressing found in the thirteenth...
This article deals with explicit permissions for two types of cross-dressing found in the thirteenth...
This article explores the ancient Israelite law, namely the Deuteronomic Code (Deut. 12–26), in term...
An Essay on Women's Clothing of the Early Phases of Jewish TraditionIn the old Jewish tradition, wom...
This paper is concerned with the issue of how Jewish identity has been constructed in late antiquity...
Over the past two decades, the issue of modesty norms and women's wearing modest dress were widely d...
Tearing of clothes occurs in sorrowful occasions but there is a class of person that the law exclude...
The central argument of my dissertation is based on two bodies of literature. The first area deals w...
Yetzer hara, commonly translated as the ‘evil inclination,’ is a key concept in rabbinic discourse c...
Gender discrimination is not a new phenomenon. It has been prevalent in many civilisations through t...
Gender discrimination is not a new phenomenon. It has been prevalent in many civilisations through t...
Although the question whether women in Israel were also allowed to present offerings stands in accor...
This longitudinal and comparative study explores the nature and development of rabbinic thought on i...
The book of Deuteronomy in the Hebrew Bible contains an extensive list of laws, from cultic regulati...
Deut 22:5 marks the single instance of a prohibition of transvestitism in the Bible, and in its whol...
This article deals with explicit permissions for two types of cross-dressing found in the thirteenth...
This article deals with explicit permissions for two types of cross-dressing found in the thirteenth...
This article explores the ancient Israelite law, namely the Deuteronomic Code (Deut. 12–26), in term...
An Essay on Women's Clothing of the Early Phases of Jewish TraditionIn the old Jewish tradition, wom...
This paper is concerned with the issue of how Jewish identity has been constructed in late antiquity...
Over the past two decades, the issue of modesty norms and women's wearing modest dress were widely d...
Tearing of clothes occurs in sorrowful occasions but there is a class of person that the law exclude...
The central argument of my dissertation is based on two bodies of literature. The first area deals w...
Yetzer hara, commonly translated as the ‘evil inclination,’ is a key concept in rabbinic discourse c...
Gender discrimination is not a new phenomenon. It has been prevalent in many civilisations through t...
Gender discrimination is not a new phenomenon. It has been prevalent in many civilisations through t...
Although the question whether women in Israel were also allowed to present offerings stands in accor...
This longitudinal and comparative study explores the nature and development of rabbinic thought on i...