Tamar, Widowhood, and the Old English Prose Translation of Genesis

Author:

McMullen A. Joseph1,Shields-Más Chelsea2

Affiliation:

1. Indiana University Bloomington United States of America

2. SUNY Old Westbury Old Westbury United States of America

Abstract

AbstractRecently, more attention has been paid to the conscious translation efforts that produced the Old English Hexateuch/Heptateuch, examining how a number of revisions must be analyzed as an effort to control readerly interpretation. This study contributes to that discussion by considering the translation of Genesis 38, which greatly changes the biblical narrative by removing Tamar’s second marriage and any rationale for the death of her first husband. Previously, this omission has been read as a way to streamline the story or avoid unsavory (sexual) topics. We argue, instead, for another, concurrent possibility: to revise the text in light of pre-Conquest views on widowhood. The turn of the millennium saw early English widows gain much more attention in various legal and ecclesiastical sources. These sources, we believe, speak to the concerns of the translator in some of the alterations found in the chapter (including forced remarriage, multiple marriages, the amount of time in between marriages, and the Levirate custom as an institution).

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Literature and Literary Theory,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics

Reference82 articles.

1. Alamichel, Marie-Françoise. 2008. Widows in Anglo-Saxon and Medieval Britain. Oxford/Bern: Lang.

2. Arnold, Bill T. 2008. Genesis: New Cambridge Bible Commentary. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

3. Attenborough, Frederick L. (ed. and trans.). 1922. The Laws of the Earliest English Kings. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

4. Barnhouse, Rebecca. 2000. “Shaping the Hexateuch Text for an Anglo-Saxon Audience”. In: Barnhouse and Withers, 91–108.

5. Barnhouse, Rebecca and Benjamin C. Withers (eds.). 2000. The Old English Hexateuch: Aspects and Approaches. Kalamazoo, MI: Medieval Institute Publications.

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