Susan E. Haddox

Metaphor and Masculinity in Hosea

Peter Lang Inc., International Academic Publishers

Date de publication : 2012-02-14

The metaphors in Hosea are rich and varied, comprising both gendered and non-gendered image fields. This book examines the use of metaphor in Hosea through the lens of masculinity studies, which provides a means to elucidate connections between the images and to analyze their cumulative rhetorical effect. The rhetoric of both the gendered and non-gendered imagery is analyzed using a model from cognitive anthropology, which divides social space along three axes: activity, potency, and goodness. People use metaphors to position and to move one another within this space. These axes reveal how the metaphors in Hosea rhetorically relate the audience, represented by Ephraim/Israel, and YHWH to a particular construction of masculinity. Hosea uses the imagery of Assyrian treaty curses to reinforce YHWH’s masculinity and dominance, while undermining the masculinity of the audience. The rhetoric of the text attempts to bring the audience into an appropriately subordinate position with respect to YHWH and to shape its members’ actions and attitudes accordingly.

68,52

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À propos

Collection
n.c
Parution
2012-02-14
Pages
252 pages
EAN papier
9781433113567

Auteur(s) du livre



Caractéristiques détaillées - droits

EAN PDF
9781453908006
Prix
68,52 €
Nombre pages copiables
50
Nombre pages imprimables
50
Taille du fichier
4035 Ko

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