For the Love of God: The Bible as an Open BookChoice Outstanding Academic Title of 2008 Alicia Ostriker named to Moment Magazine's list of Ten Great Jewish Poets, 2011 Quoting King Solomon's famous prayer to God at the Temple in Jerusalem, "Behold, the heaven of heavens cannot contain thee; how much less this house that I have builded," Alicia Suskin Ostriker posits a God who cannot be contained by dogma and doctrine. Troubled by the way the Bible has become identified in our culture with a monolithic authoritarianism, Ostriker focuses instead on the extraordinary variability of Biblical writing.For the Love of God is a provocative and inspiring re-interpretation of six essential Biblical texts: The Song of Songs, the Book of Ruth, Psalms, Ecclesiastes, Jonah, and Job. In prose that is personal and probing, analytically acute and compellingly readable, Ostriker sees these writings as "counter-texts," deviating from convention yet deepening and enriching the Bible, our images of God, and our own potential spiritual lives. Attempting to understand "some of the wildest, strangest, most splendid writing in Western tradition," she shows how the Bible embraces sexuality and skepticism, boundary crossing and challenges to authority, how it illuminates the human psyche and mirrors our own violent times, and how it asks us to make difficult choices in the quest for justice. For better or worse, our society is wedded to the Bible. But according to Talmud, "There is always another interpretation." Ostriker demonstrates that the Bible, unlike its reputation, offers a plenitude of surprises. |
Dentro del libro
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Preface ix Introduction 1 The Song of Songs: A Holy of Holies 9 The Book of Ruth and the Love of the Land 34 Psalm and Anti-Psalm: A Personal Interlude 55 Ecclesiastes as Witness 76 Jonah: The Book of the Question 99 Job: The Open Book ...
The story of that beginning is told in The Nakedness of the Fathers: Biblical Visions and Revisions, a combination of prose and poetry, midrash and autobiography, re-imagining biblical stories from Genesis to Job and beyond.
If not taken personally, it becomes meaningless; if not taken analytically, it becomes dogma. But the consequences of taking the Song of Songs, the Book of Ruth, Psalms, Ecclesiastes, Jonah, and Job both personally and ...
Regarding translations: I have relied on the King James Version (KJV) in my chapters on the Song of Songs, Psalms, and Job, for the sake of its beauty as well as its high degree of faithfulness to the Hebrew.1 For Ruth, Ecclesiastes, ...
Several passages in “Job: the Open Book” are taken from Alicia Suskin Ostriker, The Nakedness of the Fathers: Biblical Visions and Revisions (Rutgers University Press, 1994). Previous versions of “Song of Songs” appeared in The Song of ...
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Contenido
9 | |
The Book of Ruth and the Love of the Land | 34 |
A Personal Interlude | 55 |
Ecclesiastes As Witness | 76 |
The Book of the Question | 99 |
The Open Book | 120 |
Afterword | 143 |
Some Further Reading | 147 |
Notes | 153 |