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Being Subordinate Men

Paul's Rhetoric of Gender and Power in 1 Corinthians
Authors:
Publisher:
 2018

Summary

Being Subordinate Men offers a gender critical examination of Paul’s use of gender and power in the argument of 1 Corinthians. By elevating femininity and misperforming masculinity, Paul consistently undermines first century Roman norms of masculinity. Such norms of masculinity would have allowed some of the higher status men among the Corinthian believers to occupy positions of power that would give them control over lower status members of the community. Instead of supporting such a patriarchal model, Paul articulates a form of masculinity that would require these higher status men to abandon their positions of power and occupy positions that would put them on equal status with women and men whose bodies and identities forced them to the margins of society. Such a move subverts forms of toxic, or hegemonic, masculinity that give a select few men power over the bodies of others. Instead of a toxic masculinity, Paul commands the men in his audience to embody a failed, or subordinate, masculinity. This failed masculinity not only imitates Paul’s own subordinate masculinity, seen in his embrace of feminine imagery and his failure to live up to first century Roman norms of masculinity, but also supports Paul’s main reason for writing 1 Corinthians by confronting the factionalism that threatens to destroy the believing community. Paul’s vision for the believing community is one of equality that centers itself in imitation of the crucified body of Jesus, a body that demonstrates that equality, not domination, is the path to the kingdom of God.

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Bibliographic data

Copyright year
2018
ISBN-Print
978-1-9787-0333-9
ISBN-Online
978-1-9787-0334-6
Publisher
Lexington, Lanham
Language
English
Pages
270
Product type
Book Titles

Table of contents

ChapterPages
    1. Contents No access
    2. Preface and Acknowledgments No access
    3. Abbreviations No access
  1. Chapter One. Uncovering Paul’s Body No access Pages 1 - 18
  2. Chapter Two. The Body, Masculinity, and Power No access Pages 19 - 64
  3. Chapter Three. Reconstructed Masculinity No access Pages 65 - 112
  4. Chapter Four. Paul’s Subordinate Masculinity No access Pages 113 - 158
  5. Chapter Five. Manifestations of Subordinate Masculinity in Paraenesis No access Pages 159 - 212
  6. Chapter Six. Summary and Test of the Argument No access Pages 213 - 230
  7. Bibliography No access Pages 231 - 254
  8. Subject Index No access Pages 255 - 258
  9. Author Index No access Pages 259 - 260
  10. Ancient Sources No access Pages 261 - 268
  11. About the Author No access Pages 269 - 270

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