What happens when women writers re-imagine culture? How do feminists need that ur-text of patriarchy, the Bible? Unwritten volume: Re-thinking teh Bible attempts to re-think certain customary assumptions about feminism and about the Bible, in the light of poetic readings of biblical texts by 19th and 20th century women writers. The author proposes that women writers relate to the Bible in complex ways, which both critique biblical misogyny and stem directly from elements of transgressive writing within scripture iteself. Ultimately Ostriker suggests that feminist reinterpretations of scripture are the inevitable consequence of spiritual values which ask us to turn from institutions to the meaning of the original revelation.Introduction.
1. Out of My Sight.
2. A Word made Flesh.
3. The Lilith Poems.
4. An Interview with Alicia Ostriker.
Bibliography.
Index.
Highly Recommended .
Cross Currents An essentially optimistic, as well as delightfully iconoclastic, reading of scripture. Church Times
Alicia Ostriker is the author of seven volumes of poetry, as well as
Vision and Verse in William Blake and an annotated edition of Blake's
Complete Poems. Her work as a feminist critic includes
Writing like a Woman and the widely influential and controversial
Stealing the Language: The Emergence of Women's Poetry in America. What happens when women writers imagine culture? What is the relation of the feminist writer to the male tradition?
Feminist Revision and the Bible extends the feminist examination of western literature to the founding document of patriarchal culture, the Bible. At the same time, it re-thinks certain customary assumptions about feminism and about the Bible, in the light of poels#