Sarah the Princess: Tracing the Hellenistic Afterlife of a Pentateuchal Female Figure |
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Authors: | Hanna Tervanotko |
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Affiliation: | McMaster University, Department of Religious Studies University Hall, Room 127, 1280 Main Street West, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada L8S 4K1 |
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Abstract: | This article analyses Philo of Alexandria’s and Josephus Flavius’s interpretations of Sarah from the viewpoint of social and political power attached to her. Both ascribe the figure royal attributes (i.e. she is depicted as a princess or queen) and other features that promote her as a virtuous model and an individual of public standing. A variety of emphases, philological and philosophical interpretations alike, jointly serve to construct Sarah’s exemplarity. The aim of this article is to demonstrate that different dimensions of biblical female figures may be revealed when their role as spouses and mothers is not taken as the starting point of analysis in studies concerning the reception history of biblical women. |
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