The Construction of Shame in the Hebrew Bible
The Prophetic Contribution
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published:1st Jun '02
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

This book explores the phenomenon of shame in the Hebrew bible. It focuses particularly on the major prophets, because shame vocabulary is most prominent there. Shame has been widely discussed in the literature of psychology and anthropology; the book discusses the findings of both disciplines in some detail. It emphasises the social-anthropological honour/shame model, which a considerable number of biblical scholars since the early 1990s have embraced enthusiastically. The author highlights the shortcomings of this heuristic model and proposes a number of alternative critical approaches.
"Stiebert is to be commended for calling the attention of biblical scholars to a neglected semantic domain and for focusing our attention on the writings in which they predominate. She has summarized important criticisms of the honor-shame rubric, appropriately asserting that models presuming cultural continuity should not be superimposed on ancient texts.... In the end, the best insights of the book are the careful, lexically sensitive readings of biblical texts, the kind of work this reviewer wishes there was more of." --Journal of Hebrew Scriptures, Volume 4 (2002-2003)
A summary of the book -Religious Studies Review, 01/04 -- Marvin A. Sweeny * Religious Studies Review *
A summary of the book -Religious Studies Review, 01/04 * Religious Studies Review *
ISBN: 9781841272689
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 450g
210 pages