罗得的妻子还站着:寻找盐柱

Katherine B. Low
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摘要

本文探讨了读者如何在死海岸边寻找罗得的妻子,以及他们如何将盐柱作为目的地、象征和永久的纪念。罗得的妻子是否变成了今天前往死海的旅行者可以参观的盐柱,与这一分析无关。这本对罗得妻子的接受史跨越了许多世纪,认为读者利用她来满足自己的兴趣,以解决自己的文化问题。为了广泛地涵盖罗得妻子的一些趋势和传统,本书从时间顺序的三个方面进行了论述。虽然希伯来文本对纪念罗得的妻子仍然矛盾,但希腊化的犹太人和早期基督教的资料显示,人们关心的是,根据上帝的最后审判来纪念罗得的妻子。然后,文章转向中世纪基督教的旅行叙述和地图,用罗得的妻子来标记基督教世界的边界,朝圣者在十字军时代的担忧中寻找她。最后,讨论了现代资料,处理罗得的妻子在象征性创伤,越轨和危险方面。性别理论和酷儿理论在本文中被用作次要的意识形态透镜,通过它们来参与接受史。结果是一个复杂的画面,关于人们如何利用罗得的妻子来谈判边界,参与圣经神话,并进一步推进他们自己的议程。
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Lot’s Wife is Still Standing: In Search of the Pillar of Salt
Abstract This article explores how readers search for Lot’s wife at the shore of the Dead Sea and how they use the pillar of salt as a destination, as a symbol, and as a lasting memorial. Whether Lot’s wife turned into a pillar of salt that travelers to the Dead Sea can visit today is not relevant for this analysis. Spanning many centuries, this reception history of Lot’s wife argues that readers use her for their own interests to address their own cultural concerns. Three chronological areas are addressed for a broad-sweeping coverage of some trends and traditions about Lot’s wife. While the Hebrew text remains ambivalent about memorializing Lot’s wife, Hellenistic Jewish and early Christian sources reveal a concern to remember Lot’s wife in terms of God’s final judgments. The article then turns to medieval Christian travel narratives and maps that use Lot’s wife to mark the borders of Christendom, with pilgrims seeking her amid Crusades-era concerns. Finally, modern sources are discussed that deal with Lot’s wife in terms of symbolizing sexual trauma, deviance, and danger. Gender theory and queer theory are utilized in the article as secondary ideological lenses through which to engage reception history. What results is a complex picture regarding how people use Lot’s wife to negotiate boundaries, engage biblical myth, and further their own agendas.
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