Give Me Children or I Shall Die: Children and Communal Survival in Biblical Literature

In the subsistence agricultural social context of the Hebrew Bible, children were necessary for communal survival. In such an economy, childrens labor contributes to the familys livelihood from a young age, rather than simply preparing the child for future adult work. Ethnographic research shows that this interdependent family life contrasts significantly with that of privileged modern Westerners, for whom children are dependents. This text seeks to look beyond the dominant cultural constructions of childhood in the modern West and the moral rhetoric that accompanies them so as to uncover what biblical texts intend to communicate when they utilize children as literary tropes in their own social, cultural, and historical context.

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Give Me Children or I Shall Die: Children and Communal Survival in Biblical Literature

In the subsistence agricultural social context of the Hebrew Bible, children were necessary for communal survival. In such an economy, childrens labor contributes to the familys livelihood from a young age, rather than simply preparing the child for future adult work. Ethnographic research shows that this interdependent family life contrasts significantly with that of privileged modern Westerners, for whom children are dependents. This text seeks to look beyond the dominant cultural constructions of childhood in the modern West and the moral rhetoric that accompanies them so as to uncover what biblical texts intend to communicate when they utilize children as literary tropes in their own social, cultural, and historical context.

41.49 In Stock
Give Me Children or I Shall Die: Children and Communal Survival in Biblical Literature

Give Me Children or I Shall Die: Children and Communal Survival in Biblical Literature

by Laurel W. Koepf-Taylor (Editor)
Give Me Children or I Shall Die: Children and Communal Survival in Biblical Literature

Give Me Children or I Shall Die: Children and Communal Survival in Biblical Literature

by Laurel W. Koepf-Taylor (Editor)

eBook

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Overview

In the subsistence agricultural social context of the Hebrew Bible, children were necessary for communal survival. In such an economy, childrens labor contributes to the familys livelihood from a young age, rather than simply preparing the child for future adult work. Ethnographic research shows that this interdependent family life contrasts significantly with that of privileged modern Westerners, for whom children are dependents. This text seeks to look beyond the dominant cultural constructions of childhood in the modern West and the moral rhetoric that accompanies them so as to uncover what biblical texts intend to communicate when they utilize children as literary tropes in their own social, cultural, and historical context.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781451469790
Publisher: Augsburg Fortress, Publishers
Publication date: 11/01/2013
Series: Emerging Scholars
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 224
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Laurel W. Koepf-Taylor is assistant professor of Old Testament at Eden Theological Seminary. This is a revision of her dissertation, completed under the direction of David M. Carr at Union Theological Seminary.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments ix

Abbreviations xiii

1 Biblical Children, Biblical Childhoods 1

2 Interpreting (In)fertility 33

3 The Value of Education and Enculturation 65

4 The Child and the Community at Risk 93

5 Conclusion 125

Bibliography 131

Index of Subjects 145

Index of Names 151

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