‘Lethal Love’ is, in Mieke
Bal’s words, ‘first and foremost a study of biblical love stories and
how we read them.’ Bal reads five familiar love stories from the Bible -
David and Bathsheba, Samson and Delilah, Ruth and Boaz, Judah and
Tamar, and Adam and Eve - differently. In the past, readings of these
stories have represented woman’s love as lethal - women are victimizers
to be avoided lest one be killed by their love. Bal calls into question
these interpretations of the past, revealing a patriarchal ideology of
interpretation that has dominated.
Borrowing interpretive tools from semiotics and
psychoanalysis, Bal deconstructs this dominant ideology by stressing the
different - the multivalent, heterogeneous meanings possible when one
pays close attention to the text. Her powerful, exciting interpretations
resonate deeply and raise new possibilities for the ways we read the
love stories of the Bible.
Description:
‘Lethal Love’ is, in Mieke Bal’s words, ‘first and foremost a study of biblical love stories and how we read them.’ Bal reads five familiar love stories from the Bible - David and Bathsheba, Samson and Delilah, Ruth and Boaz, Judah and Tamar, and Adam and Eve - differently. In the past, readings of these stories have represented woman’s love as lethal - women are victimizers to be avoided lest one be killed by their love. Bal calls into question these interpretations of the past, revealing a patriarchal ideology of interpretation that has dominated.
Borrowing interpretive tools from semiotics and psychoanalysis, Bal deconstructs this dominant ideology by stressing the different - the multivalent, heterogeneous meanings possible when one pays close attention to the text. Her powerful, exciting interpretations resonate deeply and raise new possibilities for the ways we read the love stories of the Bible.