Interludes and Irony in the Ancestral Narrative

Interludes and Irony in the Ancestral Narrative

Hardback (18 Dec 2020)

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Publisher's Synopsis

The stories of Hagar, Dinah, and Tamar stand out as strangers in the ancestral narrative. They deviate from the main plot and draw attention to the interests and fates of characters who are not a part of the ancestral family. Readers have traditionally domesticated these strange stories. They have made them ""familiar""--all about the ancestral family. Thus Hagar's story becomes a drama of deselection, Shechem and the Hivites become emblematic for ancestral conflict with the people of the land, and Tamar becomes a lens by which to read providence in the story of Joseph. This study resurrects the question of these stories' strangeness. Rather than allow the ancestral narrative to determine their significance, it attends to each interlude's particularity and detects ironic gestures made toward the ancestral narrative. These stories contain within them the potential to defamiliarize key themes of ancestral identity: the ancestral-divine relationship, ancestral relations to the land and its inhabitants, and ancestral self-identity. Perhaps the ancestral family are not the only privileged partners of God, the only heirs to the land, or the only bloodline fit to bear the next generation.

Book information

ISBN: 9781725260788
Publisher: Wipf & Stock Publishers
Imprint: Pickwick Publications
Pub date:
DEWEY: 222.1106
Language: English
Number of pages: 272
Weight: 531g
Height: 229mm
Width: 152mm
Spine width: 16mm