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book: Constructing the Human in the Hebrew Bible
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Constructing the Human in the Hebrew Bible

  • Tanner E. Walker
Language: English
Published/Copyright: 2025
View more publications by Penn State University Press

About this book

While animals in the Hebrew Bible have received significant scholarly attention, the category of the human has remained underexamined. Constructing the Human in the Hebrew Bible addresses this gap by interrogating how biblical authors construct, reinforce, and challenge notions of humanness, focusing on the implications for identity, ethics, and ideological frameworks.

Drawing on critical theories from thinkers such as Jacques Derrida, Donna Haraway, and Giorgio Agamben, Tanner E. Walker reveals how biblical texts actively negotiate the boundaries between human and animal, divine and mortal, and self and other. Through case studies on creation narratives, divine-human hybrids like Samson, and depictions of Israel as subjugated animals under imperial rule, Walker highlights how biblical conceptions of humanness are deeply tied to questions of power, otherness, and the hierarchical organization of the world. He also situates the Hebrew Bible within the broader ancient Mediterranean and Near Eastern traditions, exploring how biblical ideas of humanness intersect with Mesopotamian and Assyrian sources. Blending biblical studies, ancient history, and critical theory, this book provides a nuanced understanding of how ancient texts grapple with the complexities of identity.

A vital resource for scholars and students of biblical studies, religious studies, and ancient history, this book challenges long-held assumptions about identity and categorization and contributes to broader conversations about how societies construct and impose categories—insights that remain profoundly relevant in contemporary debates about identity, power, and the boundaries of the human.

Interrogates how biblical authors construct, reinforce, and challenge notions of humanness, focusing on its implications for identity, ethics, and ideological frameworks.

Explores a wide range of narratives, from the creation of humanity in Genesis to depictions of divine-human hybrids like Samson, as well as passages that cast Israel as subjugated animals under imperial domination.

By situating the Hebrew Bible within the broader cultural milieu of the ancient Mediterranean and Near East, the book also examines how these constructions of humanness interact with surrounding traditions, particularly those found in Mesopotamian and Assyrian sources.

A vital resource for scholars and students of biblical studies, religious studies, and ancient history.

Author / Editor information

Contributor: Tanner E. Walker Tanner E. Walker is Visiting Assistant Professor of Religion at Wesleyan University.

Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook
Available soon
eBook ISBN:
9781646023318
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
234
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