Silenced Voices: Hearing Biblical Women Through the Genesis Apocryphon

Updated by: 
Shlomo Brand
Research notes: 
SB/not checked/06/01/2022
Reference type: 
Thesis
Author(s): 
Bennett, Shelby Renee
year: 
2021
Full title: 

Silenced Voices: Hearing Biblical Women Through the Genesis Apocryphon

Publisher: 
Trinity Western University
Work type: 
M.A.
Abstract: 

The #MeToo movement broke the silence around abuse of women. Within the church, women's voices have been dismissed, disbelieved, or intimidated into silence, reflecting the Bible's depiction of women as passive and silent, if mentioned. In stark contrast, a new text found in the Dead Sea Scrolls - called the Genesis Apocryphon - contains a retelling of Genesis stories in which the women are named, identified, and given speech and action. Why did these ancient scribes choose to expand the female characters? This study employs both biblical and feminist studies to examine the four stories of women in the Genesis Apocryphon: the women of the Watchers myth, Batenosh, Emzara, and Sarai. It finds the Second Temple authors expanding female characters' identities in order to emphasize endogamous marriages. The Genesis Apocryphon's inclusion of women's voices illuminates the deafening silence of Genesis and points a way forward for biblical interpretation and feminist praxis today.

Primary Texts: Judean Desert Documents: 
Scroll / Document: 
1Q20
URL: 
https://twu.arcabc.ca/islandora/object/twu%3A688
Label: 
24/01/2022
Record number: 
108 953