Rethinking Gender in the Community Rule : An Experiment in Sociology

Full title
Rethinking Gender in the Community Rule : An Experiment in Sociology
Research notes

Reader Checked|AK|Revised Reader keywords - AK - 17/06/2012

Reference type
Author(s)
Grossman, Maxine L.
Editor(s)
Roitman, Adolfo D.
Schiffman, Lawrence H.
Tzoref, Shani
Year
2011
Journal / Book Title || Series Title
The Dead Sea Scrolls and Contemporary Culture: Proceedings of the International Conference Held at the Israel Museum, Jerusalem (July 6-8, 2008)
Number of volumes
0
Issue / Series Volume
93
Series Title
Studies on the Texts of the Desert of Judah
Publisher
Brill
Place of Publication
Leiden
Pages
497-512
Alternative title
STDJ
Label
11/07/2011
Abstract

The insights of sociology and feminist critical scholarship have allowed scholars in the last decade to rethink common assumptions with regard to gender in the Dead Sea Scrolls. Both the basic question of the presence or absence of women in communities associated with the Scrolls, and also more complex questions concerning gendered sectarian identity, are now open to critical discussion and reassessment. An exploration of the treatment of women and men in the Damascus Document and the Rule of the Congregation (1QSa), in light of sociology and contemporary feminist critical thought, provides us with a new model for understanding the concept of gender in the Scrolls. This model can then be applied to a reading of the Community Rule (1QS) in ways that introduce new understandings of the text’s constructions of masculinity, and its notable silence on the subject of women.