🎉   Please check out our new website over at books-etc.com.

Seller
Your price
£61.51
RRP: £84.99
Save £23.48 (28%)
Dispatched within 3-4 working days.

Marriage by Capture in the Book of Judges

An Anthropological Approach. Society for Old Testament Study Monographs

Format: Hardback
Publisher: Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom
Published: 24th Mar 2017
Dimensions: w 144mm h 223mm d 19mm
Weight: 470g
ISBN-10: 1107145244
ISBN-13: 9781107145245
Barcode No: 9781107145245
Trade or Institutional customer? Contact us about large order quotes.
Synopsis
In this book, Katherine E. Southwood offers a new approach to interpreting Judges 21. Breaking away from traditional interpretations of kingship, feminism, or comparisons with Greek or Roman mythology, she explores the concepts of marriage, ethnicity, rape, and power as means of ethnic preservation and exclusion. She also exposes the many reasons why marriage by capture occurred during the post-exilic period. Judges 21 served as a warning against compromise - submission to superficial unity between the Israelites and the Benjaminites. Any such unity would result in drastic changes in the character, culture, and values of the ethnic group 'Israel'. The chapter encouraged post-exilic audiences to socially construct those categorised as 'Benjaminites' as foreigners who do not belong within the group, thereby silencing doubts about the merits of unity.

New & Used

Seller Information Condition Price
-New£61.51
+ FREE UK P & P

What Reviewers Are Saying

Submit your review
Newspapers & Magazines
'In the best tradition of radically innovative biblical interpretation, Southwood has established a framework for the discussion of the historical meaning of Judges 21 that is now the inevitable starting point for future analysis, whether or not one agrees with all the details of her particular conclusion. The members of the Society for Old Testament Study should be gratified that their new Monograph Series has been inaugurated by so substantial a work of original scholarship as this.' Philip F. Esler, Journal of Jewish Studies