Reframing Her: Biblical Women in Postcolonial Focus.REFRAMING reframing (rē·frāˑ·ming), n the revisiting and reconstruction of a patient's view of an experience to imbue it with a different usually more positive meaning in the HER: BIBLICAL WOMEN IN POSTCOLONIAL FOCUS. By Judith E. McKinlay. The Bible in the Modern World, I. Sheffield, UK: Sheffield Phoenix Press, 2004. Pp. 195. $29.50. In this volume, McKinlay has nicely woven together eight chapters of new and previously-published material into a coherent whole. Judging by this first title to appear, the new series, The Bible in the Modern World, promises to pay attention to how the Bible has been variously used around the world, and how new methods or "postures" of reading and interpretation can offer fresh perspectives on and insights into familiar stories in the Bible. McKinlay's perspective is shaped by both feminist hermeneutics hermeneutics, the theory and practice of interpretation. During the Reformation hermeneutics came into being as a special discipline concerned with biblical criticism. and postcolonial criticism, highlighting the significance of social location not only for the biblical writers and editors, but also fur the contemporary interpreter. She writes as a New Zealander, specifically as a Pakeha--the label used by the Maori population fur those who are not Maori. This is a comparable position to that of the ancient Israelites, whose narrators crafted stories about their own settlement of the land of Canaan, where they emerged as a dominant "other," while working strenuously to portray the rest of the Canaanite population as the real "Other"--tempting, dangerous, and to be avoided. McKinlay furthermore reflects critically on the missionary history of Christianity
tr.v. dis·qui·et·ed, dis·qui·et·ing, dis·qui·ets To deprive of peace or rest; trouble. n. Absence of peace or rest; anxiety. adj. Archaic Uneasy; restless. and challenging questions of interpretation and understanding" as she approaches the text (ix), which results in a helpful example of what postcolonial criticism looks like in practice. McKinlay investigates the meaning of selected biblical stories in which female characters or feminine images appear prominently and asks about how one reads these texts in a postcolonial context: how does the dominant Israelite (colonizer col·o·nize v. col·o·nized, col·o·niz·ing, col·o·niz·es v.tr. 1. To form or establish a colony or colonies in. 2. To migrate to and settle in; occupy as a colony. 3. ) point of view shape the narrator's representation of others (colonized Colonized This occurs when a microorganism is found on or in a person without causing a disease. Mentioned in: Isolation )? How are women used as characters within the narratives in support of a "politics of dominance" (x)? How are the women represented in their roles? And for what purpose is the female imagery being used? In particular, McKinlay is keenly interested in "how the biblical women and feminine images in the texts ... were used to serve certain interests and wished-fur realities" held by the narrators (x). More specifically, she is interested to see how women are used in biblical narratives to represent the "Other," over and against whom the biblical writers created Israelite identity and maintained Israelite distinction in the land of Canaan. She argues that throughout the biblical tradition the storytellers used female characters and feminine images as "symbols of the threatening powers of disordered chaos," often associated with things considered "foreign" and dangerous to Israel. She highlights a particular rhetorical (and gender) strategy by which a "stock figure," a female embodiment of evil "Otherness," is used to support Israelite (and male) dominance (30). McKinlay identifies Jezebel Jezebel (jĕz`əbĕl), in the First Book of Kings, Phoenician princess who was the wife of King Ahab and the mother of Ahaziah, Jehoram, and Athaliah. as the "prime example of that very stock figure of 'foreign' evilness, whose seductive and sinister powers are inevitably deathly death·ly adj. 1. Of, resembling, or characteristic of death: a deathly silence. 2. Causing death; fatal. adv. 1. In the manner of death. 2. " (31). In her story and, in particular, in her death, Jezebel is constructed as a character embodying everything that Israel is not by the narrator NARRATOR. A pleader who draws narrs serviens narrator, a sergeant at law. Fleta, 1. 2, c. 37. Obsolete. who is concerned to establish Israel's peculiar identity in the land. McKinlay begins with Israelite monotheism monotheism (mŏn`əthēĭzəm) [Gr.,=belief in one God], in religion, a belief in one personal god. In practice, monotheistic religion tends to stress the existence of one personal god that unifies the universe. , with its deity typically portrayed in masculine terms and images, and the sharp polemic in the Hebrew Bible against the goddesses who appear in ancient Israel's religious environment. In fact, the goddess supplies one of the primary frames through which McKinlay reads the biblical tradition, seeing her in the background of the Bible's representation of Eve, Jezebel, and the woman "clothed clothe tr.v. clothed or clad , cloth·ing, clothes 1. To put clothes on; dress. 2. To provide clothes for. 3. To cover as if with clothing. with the sun, with the moon under her feet" (Rev 21:1-2). She notes the effort on the part of Israel's official storytellers to differentiate Israel from its neighbors on religious grounds, resulting in the attempt within Israel to eradicate the feminine representation of the divine as asherah/Asherah. But immediately McKinlay wonders how the figure of Wisdom, so positively represented in Proverbs (and in which she sees traces of the feminine divine), escaped the anti-feminine polemic that was directed against Asherah. Her contusion CONTUSION, med. jurisp. An injury or lesion, arising from the shock of a body with a large surface, which presents no loss of substance, and no apparent wound. If the skin be divided, the injury takes the name of a contused wound. Vide 1 Ch. Pr, 38; 4 Carr. & P. 381, 487, 558, 565; 6 Carr. : one finally eradicates a female deity by transforming her into a metaphor (5). Wisdom may be feminine, but she is a feminine expression of some aspect of Israel's male deits. The rest of the volume follows this leitmotif leit·mo·tif also leit·mo·tiv n. 1. A melodic passage or phrase, especially in Wagnerian opera, associated with a specific character, situation, or element. 2. A dominant and recurring theme, as in a novel. through the Bible. McKinlay argues that this effort to suppress the "Other" (and the goddess) can be traced in the portrayal of women elsewhere in the biblical text. Specifically, she takes up stories involving Eve, Sarah (and Hagar), Rahab and Ruth ("Others" who nevertheless appear positively in Israel's story as heroines because of their having abandoned their Canaanite [Moabite] "otherness" and who speak the words their Israelite narrators have given them), Jezebel, the Syrophoenidan (Canaanite) woman who encounters Jesus at Tyre, and the two cities--Babylon/Rome and (new) Jerusalem--portrayed as women, in the Apocalypse. In each chapter, McKinlay draws on personal experience from her New Zealand (and PaSha) context, as well as Maori religion and customs, and contemporary literature from New Zealand. In the conclusion she writes: "Just as over centuries scribes, editors, scholars, and creative imaginers have all taken these female characters and images and shaped them to fit their own careful construals, so I have been suggesting that for women and fur (post)colonial readers there is a need to scrutinize them afresh a·fresh adv. Once more; anew; again: start afresh. afresh Adverb once more Adv. 1. and read them again with care" (163). McKinlay effectively draws readers, who may well enjoy a place of privilege within the dominant culture, into just such a careful rereading, with her dearly written study about biblical women. With this little volume in hand and in mind, the reader has new frames through which to read again the biblical tradition. Mark Bartusch Valparaiso University Valparaiso University, known colloquially as Valpo, is a private university located in the city of Valparaiso in the U.S. state of Indiana. Founded in 1859, it consists of five undergraduate colleges, a graduate school, and a law school. Valparaiso, IN 46383 |
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