Studia Antiqua
Keywords
feminism, Judith, Bible, prophets
Abstract
The character of Judith has often been reduced to a dichotomy: is she a pro-feminist or an anti-feminist character? This traditional debate limits Judith and tries to squeeze her into ill-fitting literary boxes. The fol- lowing paper offers a more nuanced interpretation for the character and role of Judith within her story, particularly that Judith is a prophet. It first dem- onstrates that she meets the criteria of a prophet by synthesizing the works of Martti Nissinen, Esther Hamori, and Lester L. Grabbe. It then examines how her “irritations”—morally or culturally questionable actions—do not disqualify her from this role. The paper concludes with questions of feminist interpretation, suggesting that sexist assumptions may influence the way Judith is typically received by interpreters and offers thoughts on the inter- preters’ responsibility to challenge personal bias.
BYU ScholarsArchive Citation
von Bose, Heidyn. "Outside the Dichotomy: Redefining Judith as a Prophet." Studia Antiqua 23, no. 1 (2024). https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/studiaantiqua/vol23/iss1/3
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