edited by Mark J. Boda, Carol J. Dempsey and LeAnn Snow Flesher
SBL Press, 2012 Paper: 978-1-58983-701-0 | eISBN: 978-1-58983-702-7 Library of Congress Classification BS1199.J38D38 2012
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | TOC
ABOUT THIS BOOK This volume showcases recent exploration of the portrait of Daughter Zion as “she” appears in biblical Hebrew poetry. Using Carleen Mandolfo’s Daughter Zion Talks Back to the Prophets (Society of Biblical Literature, 2007) as a point of departure, the contributors to this volume explore the image of Daughter Zion in its many dimensions in various texts in the Hebrew Bible. Approaches used range from poetic, rhetorical, and linguistic to sociological and ideological. To bring the conversation full circle, Carleen Mandolfo engages in a dialogic response with her interlocutors. The contributors are Mark J. Boda, Mary L. Conway, Stephen L. Cook, Carol J. Dempsey, LeAnn Snow Flesher, Michael H. Floyd, Barbara Green, John F. Hobbins, Mignon R. Jacobs, Brittany Kim, Cheryl A. Kirk-Duggan, Christl M. Maier, Carleen Mandolfo, Jill Middlemas, Kim Lan Nguyen, and Lena-Sofia Tiemeyer.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY Mark J. Boda is Professor of Old Testament, McMaster Divinity College, and Professor, Faculty of Theology, McMaster University. He is recently the author of 1–2 Chronicles (Tyndale House) and co-editor of Let Us Go Up to Zion: Essays in Honour of H. G. M. Williamson on the Occasion of His Sixty-Fifth Birthday (Brill) and Dictionary of the Old Testament: Prophets (IVP Academic).
Carol J. Dempsey is Professor of Theology (Biblical Studies), University of Portland. She is the author or co-author of numerous books, including Isaiah: God's Poet of Light (Chalice), The Prophets: A Liberation-Critical Reading (Augsburg Fortress), and Reading the Bible, Transforming Conflict (Orbis).
LeAnn Snow Flesher is Professor of Old Testament and Academic Dean at American Baptist Seminary of the West at Berkeley, Graduate Theological Union. She is the author of Left Behind? Facts behind the Fiction (Judson Press).
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Table of Contents
List of Abbreviations
Preface
Cognitive Linguistics and the "Idolatry-Is-Adultery" Metaphor of Jeremiah 3 by Barbara Green
Speaking of Speaking: The Form of Zion's Suffering in Lamentations by Jill Middlemas
Isaiah 40-55: A Judahite Reading Drama by Lena-Sofia Tiemeyer
The Fecundity of Fair Zion: Beauty and Fruitfulness as Spiritual Fulfillment by Stephen L. Cook
Daughter Zion: Metaphor and Dialogue in the Book of Lamentations by Mary L. Conway
Yhwh as Jealous Husband: Abusive Authoritarian or Passionate Protector? A Reexamination of a Prophetic Image by Brittany Kim
Zion's Plea That God See Her as She Sees Herself: Unanswered Prayer in Lamentations 1-2 by John F. Hobbins
The Daughter of Zion Goes Fishing in Heaven by Michael H. Floyd
Ezekiel 16—Shared Memory of Yhwh's Relationship with Jerusalem: A Story of Fraught Expectations by Mignon R. Jacobs
Zion's Body as a Site of God's Motherhood in Isaiah 66:7-14 by Christl M. Maier
Demonized Children and Traumatized, Battered Wives: Daughter Zion as Biblical Metaphor of Domestic and Sexual Violence by Cheryl A. Kirk-Duggan
Mission Not Impossible: Justifying Zion's Destruction and Exonerating the Common Survivors by Kim Lan Nguyen
Daughter Zion: Codependent No More by LeAnn Snow Flesher
The Daughter's Joy by Mark J. Boda
"Whose God Is This Anyway?" A Response to Carleen Mandolfo by Carol J. Dempsey
Daughter Zion Talks Back to Her Interlocutors by Carleen Mandolfo
This volume showcases recent exploration of the portrait of Daughter Zion as “she” appears in biblical Hebrew poetry. Using Carleen Mandolfo’s Daughter Zion Talks Back to the Prophets (Society of Biblical Literature, 2007) as a point of departure, the contributors to this volume explore the image of Daughter Zion in its many dimensions in various texts in the Hebrew Bible. Approaches used range from poetic, rhetorical, and linguistic to sociological and ideological. To bring the conversation full circle, Carleen Mandolfo engages in a dialogic response with her interlocutors. The contributors are Mark J. Boda, Mary L. Conway, Stephen L. Cook, Carol J. Dempsey, LeAnn Snow Flesher, Michael H. Floyd, Barbara Green, John F. Hobbins, Mignon R. Jacobs, Brittany Kim, Cheryl A. Kirk-Duggan, Christl M. Maier, Carleen Mandolfo, Jill Middlemas, Kim Lan Nguyen, and Lena-Sofia Tiemeyer.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY Mark J. Boda is Professor of Old Testament, McMaster Divinity College, and Professor, Faculty of Theology, McMaster University. He is recently the author of 1–2 Chronicles (Tyndale House) and co-editor of Let Us Go Up to Zion: Essays in Honour of H. G. M. Williamson on the Occasion of His Sixty-Fifth Birthday (Brill) and Dictionary of the Old Testament: Prophets (IVP Academic).
Carol J. Dempsey is Professor of Theology (Biblical Studies), University of Portland. She is the author or co-author of numerous books, including Isaiah: God's Poet of Light (Chalice), The Prophets: A Liberation-Critical Reading (Augsburg Fortress), and Reading the Bible, Transforming Conflict (Orbis).
LeAnn Snow Flesher is Professor of Old Testament and Academic Dean at American Baptist Seminary of the West at Berkeley, Graduate Theological Union. She is the author of Left Behind? Facts behind the Fiction (Judson Press).
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Table of Contents
List of Abbreviations
Preface
Cognitive Linguistics and the "Idolatry-Is-Adultery" Metaphor of Jeremiah 3 by Barbara Green
Speaking of Speaking: The Form of Zion's Suffering in Lamentations by Jill Middlemas
Isaiah 40-55: A Judahite Reading Drama by Lena-Sofia Tiemeyer
The Fecundity of Fair Zion: Beauty and Fruitfulness as Spiritual Fulfillment by Stephen L. Cook
Daughter Zion: Metaphor and Dialogue in the Book of Lamentations by Mary L. Conway
Yhwh as Jealous Husband: Abusive Authoritarian or Passionate Protector? A Reexamination of a Prophetic Image by Brittany Kim
Zion's Plea That God See Her as She Sees Herself: Unanswered Prayer in Lamentations 1-2 by John F. Hobbins
The Daughter of Zion Goes Fishing in Heaven by Michael H. Floyd
Ezekiel 16—Shared Memory of Yhwh's Relationship with Jerusalem: A Story of Fraught Expectations by Mignon R. Jacobs
Zion's Body as a Site of God's Motherhood in Isaiah 66:7-14 by Christl M. Maier
Demonized Children and Traumatized, Battered Wives: Daughter Zion as Biblical Metaphor of Domestic and Sexual Violence by Cheryl A. Kirk-Duggan
Mission Not Impossible: Justifying Zion's Destruction and Exonerating the Common Survivors by Kim Lan Nguyen
Daughter Zion: Codependent No More by LeAnn Snow Flesher
The Daughter's Joy by Mark J. Boda
"Whose God Is This Anyway?" A Response to Carleen Mandolfo by Carol J. Dempsey
Daughter Zion Talks Back to Her Interlocutors by Carleen Mandolfo