The article shows that the biblical account of Jacob’s marriage to Rachel and Leah is a purposeful literary inversion of the wife-sister stories told of his father and grandfather
The Joseph story (Gen 37-50) is often recognized for its remarkable literary unity and depth. At the...
The present thesis argues that the story of Judah and Tamar in Genesis 38 is to be read as the type ...
Henning In Genesis 35, the beloved Jewish matriarch, Rachel, dies in childbirth outside of Bethlehem...
This article deals with the formation process of the traditions concerning the three patriarchs from...
The Book of Genesis is principally a description of the emergence of interconnected families with sp...
The story of Esau and Jacob, the two powerful sons of Isaac and Rebekah is one of the several confli...
Putting Tamar in her Place: Rosalie Ní Mhaoldomhnaigh Tamar and Genesis 38 strayed by accident into...
Includes bibliographical references (p. ).The book of Genesis portrays the character Jacob as a braz...
The research problem of this article is the question of how Leah is presented in the biblical narrat...
This paper examines the influence of Genesis 38 on the Book of Ruth. Both texts feature women—Tamar ...
This article explores how the friendship of the two women, Naomi and Ruth, crossed religious and cul...
The expulsion of Hagar and her son Ishmael from the household of Sarah and Abraham (Genesis 21:8-21)...
Happiness and lament in the house of Jacob The birth narrative in Genesis 29:31-30:24 is a cohere...
The narrative blocks which comprise Genesis are prefaced by statements which suggest ways in which t...
Abraham and Isaac separately ‘used’ their wives to stay alive. Viewed, on one hand, as a pragmatic a...
The Joseph story (Gen 37-50) is often recognized for its remarkable literary unity and depth. At the...
The present thesis argues that the story of Judah and Tamar in Genesis 38 is to be read as the type ...
Henning In Genesis 35, the beloved Jewish matriarch, Rachel, dies in childbirth outside of Bethlehem...
This article deals with the formation process of the traditions concerning the three patriarchs from...
The Book of Genesis is principally a description of the emergence of interconnected families with sp...
The story of Esau and Jacob, the two powerful sons of Isaac and Rebekah is one of the several confli...
Putting Tamar in her Place: Rosalie Ní Mhaoldomhnaigh Tamar and Genesis 38 strayed by accident into...
Includes bibliographical references (p. ).The book of Genesis portrays the character Jacob as a braz...
The research problem of this article is the question of how Leah is presented in the biblical narrat...
This paper examines the influence of Genesis 38 on the Book of Ruth. Both texts feature women—Tamar ...
This article explores how the friendship of the two women, Naomi and Ruth, crossed religious and cul...
The expulsion of Hagar and her son Ishmael from the household of Sarah and Abraham (Genesis 21:8-21)...
Happiness and lament in the house of Jacob The birth narrative in Genesis 29:31-30:24 is a cohere...
The narrative blocks which comprise Genesis are prefaced by statements which suggest ways in which t...
Abraham and Isaac separately ‘used’ their wives to stay alive. Viewed, on one hand, as a pragmatic a...
The Joseph story (Gen 37-50) is often recognized for its remarkable literary unity and depth. At the...
The present thesis argues that the story of Judah and Tamar in Genesis 38 is to be read as the type ...
Henning In Genesis 35, the beloved Jewish matriarch, Rachel, dies in childbirth outside of Bethlehem...