Wednesday, May 3, 2023

Susan Ackerman on “Women’s Reproductive Magic" in the book of Genesis

Genesis 38:28:

 

. . . the midwife who attends Judah’s daughter-in-law Tamar as she gives birth ties a red thread around the hand of Tamar’s son Zeraḥ as he breaches the womb. Most probably, as noted above, this is an apotropaic act meant to protect the baby from malevolent agents. In the words of Carol Meyers, the red thread’s use “may reflect a set of practices involving the apotropaic character of strands of dyed yarn, with both their red color and the fact that they are bound on the infant’s hand having magical protective powers.” (Meyers, “From Household to House of Yahweh,” 290; Meyers, Households and Holiness, 38-39) (Susan Ackerman, Women and the Religion of Ancient Israel [The Anchor Yale Bible Reference Library; New Haven: Yale University Press, 2022], 285-86)

 

Gen 30:14-16:

 

There, Rachel, who is barren (Gen 29:31), and her sister Leah, who has ceased to bear children (Gen 30:9), vie to use the “love plants” (dûdā’im, a term kindred to the noun dôd, meaning “love, beloved”) that Lah’s son Reuben has found in a field. Their hope is to benefit from the love plants’ powers as an aphrodisiac and their ability to facilitate reproduction. Meyers thus writes of Rachel and Leah engaging in a “magical act performed to promote fertility,” and Marten Stol, who follows the standard interpretation that Leah’s and Rachel’s “love plants” were mandrake roots, describes the mandrake of Gen 30:14-16 as “a magical plant.” (Meyers, Household and Holiness, 38) (Ibid., 286)

 

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