$48.00
This composite, postcolonial and multidimensional volume contains sixteen original essays by distinguished Jewish and Christian Scripture scholars on a wide range of perspectives on the relation between Jesus and women as portrayed in the New Testament Gospels, as historically reconstructed in the context of Second Temple Judaisms and of Mediterranean society, as well as in present actualizations. The contributions reflect the different social locations of interpreters from all continents and testify to the richness of methods employed in biblical interpretation at the end of the twentieth century, ranging from literary approaches (narrative criticism, reader-response criticism, intertextuality), historical-critical methods, archaeology, and social-scientific interpretation to cultural studies and film theory. By addressing new questions and searching for answers on untrodden paths, the vital scholarship on Jesus and women will be re-viewed, enriched, and challenged.
Ingrid Rosa Kitzberger, Dr.theol. (1986), Mag.theol. et Mag.phil. (1978), University of Salzburg, Austria, is a Lise Meitner Research Fellow at the University of Münster (Germany). She has published widely in feminist interpretation and reader-response criticism.