Contact us on (02) 8445 2300
For all customer service and order enquiries

Woodslane Online Catalogues

9780809322749 Academic Inspection Copy

Music in the Old Bones

Jezebel Through the Ages
Description
Author
Biography
Reviews
Google
Preview
An alien, a polytheist from Phoenicia, the biblical Queen Jezebel posed a serious threat to the stability of the Israelite' single male deity. So powerful was this threat that writers through the ages have portrayed her as the incarnation of feminine evil, and her name has become synonymous with the misogynist view of women as seductresses. Janet Howe Gaines argues that the bride of the Israelite King Ahab became a convenient scapegoat for biblical writers who portrayed her as the primary force behind their nation's apostasy. The biblical account presents the queen as a murdered, as a disruptive force for evil. despised, the strong-willed Jezebel is still one of the most intriguing women of the Bible. This book is a guide to the eternal Jezebel story. The first part of this illustrated study is a detailed analysis that explores the biblical tale from traditional and feminist points of view. Gaines then analyzes the ways authors through the centuries have treated Jezebel. her unburied bones became misogynist relics for generations of writers who retold her story as a warning about the dangers of rebelling against patriarchal society. from the sermons of John Knox to the novels of Margaret Atwood, from the poetry of Percy Shelley to the ballads of Boyz II Men, from the drama of Racine to the Academy Award-winning film starring Bette Davis, Jezebel has long been the subject of artistic inquiry. her image as the bad girl of the Bible is still useful to writers. Most exploit her name and evil reputation to enhance their admonitions to women, but a few break away from tradition and openly admire Jezebel's courage and vigour. Placing the biblical account of Jezebel's doomed reign in the context of its xenophobic writers, the author proposes a new and more sympathetic reading of the murdered queen whose body was left to rot in the streets and whose reputation suffered a fate even more egregious. Rather than providing a decent burial for the mangled bones of Jezebel, Gaines seeks to flesh them out and revivify them because, as she demonstrates, "there's music in the old bones yet".
Janet Howe Gaines specializes in the Bible as literature in the Department of English at the University of New Mexico, teaches Hebrew, and is the director of Hillel.
"Those interested in the portrayal of women in the Bible, the Bible and literature, and other issues in gender or women's studies will certainly benefit from this book. [Music in the Old Bones] will open a new discussion about female characters. The fact that [Gaines] traces [Jezebel] through mounds of literatures is a remarkable feat!"-Marla J. Selvidge, author of Notorious Voices: Feminist Biblical Interpretation "Music in the Old Bones examines the life of King Ahab's consort. The author rejects the traditional view of Jezebel as a wicked queen who deserved her grue-some death... You'll find this a stimulating contrarian view of one of history's more strong-willed women."-Parade Magazine
Google Preview content