This volume has its origins in a conference entitled ‘Women and Gender in the Bible and the Ancient World’ (University of Glasgow, 2019), a symposium with a deliberately broad scope to encourage fresh research that might transcend already-defined categories. With responses from both emerging and established academics, as well as professionals outside the academy, this collection offers a breadth of explorations of the gendered landscapes and horizons that construct, and subvert, biblical womanhood, and its reception. Familiar figures such as Mary Magdalene, Eve, and Tamar are treated alongside unnamed women whose anonymity is revealing. Exploring a range of performances from ritual to resistance, and from storytelling to sex work, t...
The Hebrew Bible lacks a term for androgyny or hermaphroditism. The term tumtumim, which identifies ...
We are not able to read a text without the 'specta cles' of our own context which can make us blind ...
The boundaries of religious belonging are often based upon essentialist patriarchal conceptions of d...
Using Anita Diamant's The Red Tent, India Edghill's Queenmaker Margaret George's Mary...
In trying to identify the possible wider influence of feminist biblical scholarship, two matters rec...
In trying to identify the possible wider influence of feminist biblical scholarship, two matters rec...
Open Theology invites submissions for the topical issue “Women and Gender in the Bible and the Bibli...
The journal Open Theology invites submissions for its topical issue entitled “Women and Gender in th...
In this chapter, I investigate the ways in which patriarchal biases have been consolidated if not fu...
This article focuses on issues of gender in Bible translation and looks at how the dominant patria...
This essay explores intersections between cultural anthropology and feminist Hebrew Bible studies. T...
Feminists have long been troubled by the underrepresentation, the underinterpretation, and the under...
This dissertation examines the way in which the Christian church, through its various discourses pl...
Modern gender-critical methodological frameworks that have emerged within Western academic discourse...
The biblical book of the Old Testament (OT) portrays that the patriarchal society in ancient Israel ...
The Hebrew Bible lacks a term for androgyny or hermaphroditism. The term tumtumim, which identifies ...
We are not able to read a text without the 'specta cles' of our own context which can make us blind ...
The boundaries of religious belonging are often based upon essentialist patriarchal conceptions of d...
Using Anita Diamant's The Red Tent, India Edghill's Queenmaker Margaret George's Mary...
In trying to identify the possible wider influence of feminist biblical scholarship, two matters rec...
In trying to identify the possible wider influence of feminist biblical scholarship, two matters rec...
Open Theology invites submissions for the topical issue “Women and Gender in the Bible and the Bibli...
The journal Open Theology invites submissions for its topical issue entitled “Women and Gender in th...
In this chapter, I investigate the ways in which patriarchal biases have been consolidated if not fu...
This article focuses on issues of gender in Bible translation and looks at how the dominant patria...
This essay explores intersections between cultural anthropology and feminist Hebrew Bible studies. T...
Feminists have long been troubled by the underrepresentation, the underinterpretation, and the under...
This dissertation examines the way in which the Christian church, through its various discourses pl...
Modern gender-critical methodological frameworks that have emerged within Western academic discourse...
The biblical book of the Old Testament (OT) portrays that the patriarchal society in ancient Israel ...
The Hebrew Bible lacks a term for androgyny or hermaphroditism. The term tumtumim, which identifies ...
We are not able to read a text without the 'specta cles' of our own context which can make us blind ...
The boundaries of religious belonging are often based upon essentialist patriarchal conceptions of d...