Book contents
- The Death Wish in the Hebrew Bible
- Society for Old Testament Study Monographs
- The Death Wish in the Hebrew Bible
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Death Wish as Negotiation Strategy
- 3 Death Wish in Despair and Anger
- 4 Wishing Away One’s Birth
- 5 Death Wishes as Wishful Thinking
- 6 Wishing for Death or Fighting for Life?
- Bibliography
- Author Index
- Index of Scripture and Other Sources
- Index of Hebrew Words and Phrases
- Subject Index
2 - Death Wish as Negotiation Strategy
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 September 2021
- The Death Wish in the Hebrew Bible
- Society for Old Testament Study Monographs
- The Death Wish in the Hebrew Bible
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Death Wish as Negotiation Strategy
- 3 Death Wish in Despair and Anger
- 4 Wishing Away One’s Birth
- 5 Death Wishes as Wishful Thinking
- 6 Wishing for Death or Fighting for Life?
- Bibliography
- Author Index
- Index of Scripture and Other Sources
- Index of Hebrew Words and Phrases
- Subject Index
Summary
For me, the most striking use of the death wish in the Hebrew Bible is the death wish as negotiation strategy, and thus I start with it. These death wishes are found in the Pentateuch, where they are uttered by Rebecca, Rachel, and Moses. They function as deliberate strategies employed by the person with less power in an unequal relationship. Sometimes the inequality is gendered, as when Rebecca and Rachel speak up against their husbands. At other times, there is a divine–human power differential, as with Moses’s two death wishes, which are voiced in dialogues with YHWH. Although Rebecca, Rachel, and Moses all utter death wishes, I will argue that they have no real desire to die. Rather, they use the language of the death wish as a means to achieve specific goals. The weaker party is the one who utters the death wish, setting the stakes and taking a substantial risk by bargaining with their life. Because of the power differential between petitioner and addressee, a death wish can thus function as an act of empowerment, as we will see in the following.
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- Information
- The Death Wish in the Hebrew BibleRhetorical Strategies for Survival, pp. 16 - 56Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021