Main The Body as Property: Physical Disfigurement in Biblical Law

The Body as Property: Physical Disfigurement in Biblical Law

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The Body As Property indicates that physical disfigurement functioned in biblical law to verify legal property acquisition, when changes in the status of dependents were formalized. It is based on the reality the cuneiform script, in particular, was developed in Sumer and Mesopotamia for the purpose of record keeping: to provide legal proof of ownership where the inscription of a tablet evidenced the sale, or transfer, of property. Legitimate property acquisition was as important in biblical law, where physical disfigurements marked dependents, in a similar way that the veil or the head covering identified a wife or concubine in ancient Assyrian and Judean societies. This is primarily substantiated in the accounts of prescriptive disfigurements: namely circumcision and the piercing of a slave's ear, both of which were required only when a son, or slave, was acquired permanently. It is further argued that legal entitlement was relevant also to the punitive disfigurements recorded in Exodus 21:22-24, and Deuteronomy 25:11-12, where the physical violation of women was of concern solely as an infringement of male property rights.
Request Code : ZLIBIO3775120
Categories:
Year:
2014
Publisher:
Bloomsbury T & T Clark
Language:
English
ISBN 13:
9780567665133
ISBN:
9780567659057,9780567253934,9780567665133
Series:
Biblical Studies 2014

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