"On Her Account": Reconfiguring Israel in Ruth, Esther, and Judith
By (Author) Dr Anne-Mareike Wetter
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
T.& T.Clark Ltd
22nd October 2015
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Criticism and exegesis of sacred texts
Old Testaments
222.06
Hardback
304
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
606g
Anne-Mareike Wetter investigates how the books of Ruth, Esther and Judith contribute to the discussion about Israels ethnic and religious identity in the formative period following the Babylonian Exile. Although each of these narratives deals with variations of the theme of survival in a hostile world, the question underlying them is a different one: Who are we, and who is our other The narratives are presented as sequels to Israels history as put forward in other (now biblical) texts, and presuppose Gods continuing involvement with his people. However, they subtly modify the way in which Israel can or should relate to her God by suggesting alternatives for official Temple worship or bypassing the latter altogether. While older prophetic texts make use of metaphoric language portraying Israel as YHWHs unfaithful wife, grieving widow, or ravaged virgin, Ruth, Esther and Judith can be construed as embodiments of Israel of a different kind. Wetter argues for a revisioning of Israel in and through the bodies of the three female characters, as a community which is simultaneously vulnerable and inviolable, marginalized and empowered. Their tricksterism, in all its comicality, underlines the precarious situation in which the women and the community they represent are caught. Yet it also has the power to both defeat threats from outside and amend Israels self-perception on the inside. Israel no longer has to perceive of itself as a battered wife but as one who can deploy her qualities seductive and otherwise for the survival of the community.
This is a timely book that continues current trends concerning the portrayal of identity in the biblical texts and takes these conversations further. ... This volume draws on up to date scholarship in a recognizable way while offering keen insights that push the fields of these three texts into some unexpected waters. ... [A]ny researcher or reader of Ruth, Esther of Judith studies, as well as those with a broader interest in biblical intertextuality, will find this to be a valuable and engaging book. * Reviews in Religion and Theology *
Anne-Mareike Wetter (PhD, Utrecht University, Netherlands) is at the Leiden Institute for Area Studies (LIAS), Netherlands.