Lady Parts
Biblical Women and The Vagina Monologues
Edited by Kathryn D. Blanchard and Jane S. Webster
Imprint: Wipf and Stock
Kathryn D. Blanchard is Associate Professor of Religious Studies at Alma College in Michigan. She is the author of The Protestant Ethic or the Spirit of Capitalism (Cascade, 2010).
Jane S. Webster earned an Honors Bachelor of Theology from McGill University and an MA and PhD in Religious Studies (New Testament and Early Judaism) from McMaster University in Southern Ontario. She received a prestigious doctoral fellowship from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada. Joining the faculty at Barton College in 2000, she teaches Religious Studies in the School of the Humanities; since 2014, she has served as the Director for the Center of Excellence in Teaching and Learning. In 2010, she received the Jefferson-Pilot Faculty Member of the Year award. She is an active member of the Society of Biblical Literature, the American Academy of Religion, and the Canadian Society of Biblical Studies, and has served leadership positions in the "SBL Committee for the Status of Women in the Profession" and in the "Teaching Biblical Studies in the Undergraduate Liberal Arts Context" program unit. In addition to her book, Ingesting Jesus: Eating and Drinking on the Gospel of John<,i>, she contributed to Understanding Bible by Design: Create Courses with Purpose and co-edited two volumes: Teaching the Bible in the Liberal Arts Classroom and Lady Parts. She has written multiple articles, conference presentations, and book reviews addressing topics in Johannine Studies, wisdom literature, gender, Bible and film, and teaching in Religious Studies. Prior to her academic career, Webster was a critical care nurse and missionary in South America.
"Roaring off the page and whispering through the cracks, authentic struggles with God are laid bare in these midrashic monologues. Through the fourfold feminist hermeneutic of suspicion, resistance, remembrance, and reconstruction, the Word is made flesh again and again by women with the courage to bring real-world concerns to their readings of Scripture. May their witness contribute to an end to violence against women and girls!"
--Darryl W. Stephens, Assistant General Secretary for Advocacy and Sexual Ethics, General Commission on the Status and Role of Women, United Methodist Church
"In this exciting collection of monologues, the authors expand the voices of biblical women and, in so doing, find a way to speak things that are regularly deemed unspeakable in Judeo-Christian tradition: they graphically describe their experiences of sexuality, embodiment, and trauma; they remember and resist religion's collusion with women's submission, suffering, and silencing; and they express their religiosity comingled with anger, longing, and fraught relationships. This is certainly a book that would make Eve Ensler proud."
--Kristi Upson-Saia, Associate Professor of Religious Studies, Occidental College
"If truth be told, many women in biblical stories are often depicted simply as vaginas--mute and willing vessels of the Lord or husbands. The sometimes graphic retellings in this book take this portrayal seriously, but give voice to the silenced site of suffering and delight. Lady Parts issues an eloquent and poignant denunciation of sexual violence, challenging and engaging both the imagination and the heart."
--Melody D. Knowles, Associate Professor of Old Testament, McCormick Theological Seminary
"Female sexual bodies and reproductive organs are, literally, a basic requirement for societal survival. And yet, and especially so in patriarchal societies such as the Bible's and also (regrettably still) ours in the West, those bodies, those organs, are not directly spoken about and are kept silent by and in the normative culture. In this book such body parts and their biblical owners are endowed with voices, dignity, and agency. The stories 'they tell are imaginative and at times fanciful, but always poignant and touching. Thus hidden, silent female body parts become whole, living women. Read, laugh, and cry in equal measure. Be empowered; enjoy."
--Athalya Brenner, Professor Emerita of Hebrew Bible/Old Testament, Universiteit van Amsterdam