Gendering War and Peace in the Gospel of Luke
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:18th Oct '18
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Addresses the problem of the disruption of peace with war against Jerusalem in the Gospel of Luke.
The book explores the representation of peace and the violent destruction of war with pregnant women, nursing mothers, and their children in the Gospel of Luke in the contexts of the biblical and classical worlds. It will be of interest to New Testament and classical scholars, and scholars of war.In this book, Caryn A. Reeder examines the gendered language and imagery of war and peace in the Gospel of Luke. Peace is represented with the blessing of fertility, pregnancy, and newborn infants. Pregnant and nursing women, women and children in general, and feminized Jerusalem also represent the horrors of war in the Gospel - abandoned, crushed to the ground, subject to woe and distress, to the point that barren wombs and dry breasts become a blessing. Reeder argues that the representation of peace with pregnant women and newborn infants, the most vulnerable in the population, indicates that victory belongs to God. This message is clarified by the encouragement of surrender and flight from besieged Jerusalem, rather than an active defense. Notably, there are no men to defend Jerusalem in Luke's warnings of war. The Gospel undermines the masculinization of war commonly found in Greco-Roman texts by redirecting the means of making peace from the violence of victory to the unmanly act of surrender.
'Reeder provides an impressive analysis of the extant ancient evidence of the role gender played in the issues of peace and war in the Greco-Roman and Judeo-Hebrew traditions.' J. R. Asher, Choice
'Reeder's insightful, creative, and nuanced work will reward close reading and careful study.' Todd Penner, Reading Religion
ISBN: 9781108471398
Dimensions: 235mm x 160mm x 20mm
Weight: 530g
274 pages