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Material Type: | Internet resource |
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Document Type: | Book, Internet Resource |
All Authors / Contributors: |
Marion Ann Taylor; Heather E Weir |
ISBN: | 9781932792539 1932792538 |
OCLC Number: | 234103063 |
Description: | xvii, 495 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm |
Contents: | Cover -- Table of Contents -- Preface -- Introduction -- Part 1: Eve-- The Mother of Us All -- 1: Hannah Mather Crocker -- 2: Lucy Bartoa -- 3: Esther Hewlett Copley -- 4: Favell Lee Mortimer -- 5: Sarah Moore Grimke -- 6: Angelina Emily Grimke Weld -- 7: Catherine Hunt Putnam -- 8: E.C.C. Baillie -- 9: Cecil Frances (Fanny) Alexander -- 10: Sophia Goodrich Ashton -- 11: Christina Georgina Rossetti -- 12: Charlotte Maria Tucker (A.L.O.E.) -- 13: Sarah Town Martyn -- 14: Elizabeth Rundle Charles -- 15: Etty Woosnam -- 16: Ray Frank -- 17: Henriette Greenebaum Frank -- 18: Julia Wedgwood -- 19: Lillie Devereux Blake -- 20: Elizabeth Baxter -- Conclusion -- Part 2: Sarah-- The First Mother of Israel -- 21: Sarah Trimmer -- 22: Frances Elizabeth King -- 23: Sarah Ewing Hall -- 24: Grace Aguilar -- 25: Rebekah Hyneman -- 26: Elizabeth Fries Ellet -- 27: Catherine Hunt Putnam -- 28: Sophia Goodrich Ashton -- 29: Harriet Beecher Stowe -- 30: Etty Woosnam -- 31: Julia Wedgwood -- 32: Clara Bewick Colby -- 33: Elizabeth Baxter -- Conclusion -- Part 3: Hagar-- The Wanderer -- 34: Sarah Trimmer -- 35: Sarah Hall -- 36: Grace Aguilar -- 37: Penina Moise -- 38: Susan Warner -- 39: Charlotte Maria Tucker (A.L.O.E.) -- 40: Sarah Town Martyn -- 41: Harriet Beecher Stowe -- 42: Etty Woosnam -- 43: Mary Elizabeth Beck -- 44: Harriet Morton -- 45: M.G. -- 46: Josephine Elizabeth Butler -- 47: Sarah Elizabeth Turnock -- 48: Eloise Alberta Bibb -- 49: Mary L.T. Witter -- Conclusion -- Part 4: Rebekah-- Mother of Two Nations -- 50: Frances Elizabeth King -- 51: Lady Morgan -- 52: Grace Aguilar -- 53: Cecil Frances (Fanny) Alexander -- 54: Sarah Hale -- 55: Susan Warner -- 56: Etty Woosnam -- 57: Elizabeth Julia Hasell -- 58: Mary L.T. Witter -- 59: Mary Elizabeth Beck -- 60: M.G. -- 61: Ada Ruth Habershon -- Conclusion -- Part 5: Leah and Rachel-- Founders of the House of Israel -- 62: Adelaide O'Keefe -- 63: Mary Cornwallis -- 64: Sarah Hall -- 65: Grace Aguilar -- 66: Clara Lucas Balfour -- 67: Sarah Hale -- 68: Constance and Annie de Rothschild -- 69: Harriet Beecher Stowe -- 70: Leigh Norval -- 71: M.G. -- 72: Elizabeth Baxter -- 73: Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Clara Bewick Colby -- Conclusion -- Part 6: Lot's Wife and Daughters, Dinah, Tamar, and Potiphar's Wife-- The Other Women of Genesis -- 74: Sarah Trimmer -- 75: Mary Cornwallis -- 76: Sarah Ewing Hall -- 77: Eliza Smith -- 78: S.G. Ashton -- 79. |
Responsibility: | Marion Ann Taylor and Heather E. Weir, editors. |
More information: |
Reviews
Publisher Synopsis
This remarkable volume not only fills a painful lacuna in the history of biblical interpretation, but it opens up a new field within the discipline by recovering hundreds of forgotten female voices. I am confident that this volume will serve as an important catalyst to subsequent generations who will be stimulated to pursue a gripping subject matter still largely unexplored. Brevard S. Childs, Sterling Professor of Divinity Emeritus, Yale University An invaluable collection of rare primary sources. Taylor and Weir's introductions to the authors and summarizing analyses enhance the significance of this book for the history of biblical interpretation, women's studies, and nineteenth century cultural history. Katharine Doob Sakenfeld, Eisenberger Professor of Old Testament, Princeton Theological Seminary It is hard to imagine that anyone could discover a genuinely fresh approach to modern biblical interpretation, yet Taylor and Weir have done just that. At the same time, they offer new insight into the life, learning, and thinking of nineteenth-century women, both Jews and Christians. Their careful work will benefit scholars and students of modern history, biblical studies, and women's studies. Ellen Davis, Duke Divinity School This is at once an exciting book to plunge into and a treasure-trove to be explored at leisure. The result of prodigious research and meticulous attention to detail, the book also succeeds in being highly accessible and delightfully engaging. Taylor and Weir induct us sympathetically into the various social worlds of the women and their readers and help us to appreciate the way writers, readers, and historical context are bound together, so that interpreting the Bible is seen to be a living process. This remarkable book is suited to a wide audience and will be a great resource for college or seminary courses. David M. Gunn, Texas Christian University It shows that women who were restricted from official roles within Christianity and Jewish institutions were able to preach with their pens. This is a literary legacy that has been marginalized, ignored, and nearly lost... Recommended. -- CHOICE Read more...

