Ben Sira and the men who handle books

gender and the rise of canon-consciousness

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Ben Sira and the men who handle books
Camp, Claudia V.
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July 27, 2020 | History

Ben Sira and the men who handle books

gender and the rise of canon-consciousness

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What have women to do with the rise of canon-consciousness in early Judaism? Quite a lot, Claudia Camp argues, if the book written by the early second-century BCE scribe, Ben Sira, is any indication. One of the few true misogynists in the biblical tradition, Ben Sira is beset with gender anxiety, fear that his women will sully his honor, their shame causing his name to fail from the eternal memory of his people. Yet the same Ben Sira appropriates the idealized figure of cosmic Woman Wisdom from Proverbs, and identifies her with ‘the book of the covenant of the most high God, the law that Moses commanded us’. This, then, is Ben Sira’s dilemma: a woman (Wisdom) can admit him to eternity but his own women can keep him out. It is Camp’s thesis that these conflicted perceptions of gender are fundamental to Ben Sira’s appropriation and production of authoritative religious literature, and that a critical analysis of his gender ideology is thus essential for understanding his relationship to an emerging canon. Ben Sira writes a book, and writes himself into his book, creating a possession into which he can sublimate his anxiety about the women he cannot truly possess and the God he cannot truly trust. What is more, if Ben Sira can be considered representative of his scribal class and context, his work may also provide a window into aspects of the larger cultural process of canon building, including the question of whether we would have a canon at all—or have the canon we have—if the men in that particular patriarchal culture had not coded it in the gendered terms that Ben Sira did. (Publisher).

Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
209

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Table of Contents

Theoretical perspectives
Ben Sira's gendered ethos I: honor and shame among men
Ben Sira's gendered ethos II: honor, shame, sex, and the struggle for control
Ben Sira's gendered worldview: honor, shame, wisdom, and cult
Ben Sira's gendered spaces: sex, text, and temple
Becoming canon: women, texts, and scribes from Proverbs to Sirach
Men who handle books I: textuality and the problem of theodicy
Men who handle books II: textuality and the birth of authorial self-consciousness
Wealth, women, and the iconic book: possession and the ethics of shame.

Edition Notes

Includes bibliographical references (pages 192-199) and indexes.

Published in
Sheffield
Series
Hebrew Bible monographs -- 50, Hebrew Bible monographs -- 50.
Copyright Date
2013

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
229.406
Library of Congress
BS1765.6.W7 C367 2013, BS1765.6.W7 C36 2013

The Physical Object

Pagination
xv, 209 pages
Number of pages
209

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL28391199M
ISBN 10
1907534741
ISBN 13
9781907534744
LCCN
2013487970
OCLC/WorldCat
846551566

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