The Feminized Hero in Second Temple JudaismAUTHOR: Lawrence M. Wills, Boston University School of Theology
PUBLICATION PLANNED FOR: January 2025
AVAILABILITY: Available
FORMAT: Hardback
ISBN: 9781009487160Other available formats:
Adobe eBook ReaderDescription
The turbulent Second Temple period produced searching biblical texts whose protagonists, unlike heroes like Noah, Abraham, and Moses, were more everyday figures who expressed their moral uncertainties more vocally. Reflecting on a new type of Jewish moral agent, these tales depict men who are feminized, and women who are masculinized. In this volume, Lawrence M. Wills offers a deep interrogation of these stories, uncovering the psychological aspects of Jewish identity, moral life, and decisions that they explore. Often written as novellas, the stories investigate emotions, psychological interiorizing, the self, agency, and character. Recent insights from gender and postcolonial theory inform Wills' study, as he shows how one can study and compare modern and ancient gender constructs. Wills also reconstructs the social fabric of the Second Temple period and demonstrates how a focus on emotions, the self, and moral psychology, often associated with both ancient Greek and modern literature, are present in biblical texts, albeit in a subtle, unassuming manner.
- In a period of great changes in Jewish governance and culture, examines the depiction of the more 'ordinary' heroes and heroines of Second Temple texts
- Uncovers the social fabric of a six-hundred-year period that is wrongly still considered 'secondary to the texts that come before (First Temple) and the texts that come after (New Testament and rabbinic Judaism)
- Brings to the surface psychological aspects that are often considered either 'Greek' or 'modern' (emotions, self, moral psychology, etc.) and demonstrates that they are likely present as well in often unassuming Jewish texts
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