It’s a Charming Story of Faithful Living, but …: Interpretive Tensions in the Book of Ruth

Ruth - Rhiannon Graybill

Rebecca Lindsay [+-]
Flinders University
Rebecca Lindsay lives on Gadigal and Bidjigal land (the south-east of Sydney). She teaches Hebrew Bible/Old Testament at United Theological College, part of the Charles Sturt University School of Theology. Rebecca’s research explores the entanglements of settler colonialism and biblical interpretation in the lands now called Australia.

Description

The book of Ruth is often read as a story that celebrates family, acceptance, and loyal lovingkindness. However, recent interpretations problematize the characterization of this narrative as idyllic, pointing to its troubling themes and the potentially exploitative dynamics between its characters. I argue that interpretations which highlight the charming and positive aspects of this narrative by turning away from its ambiguity and mess work to domesticate the story. Such interpretations train readers of Ruth, and other biblical stories, to frame out uncomfortable tensions of power and difference in the story world. Drawing on Sara Ahmed’s observation that learning to notice what we are taught not to notice is “a form of political labor,” I argue that learning to recognize these interpretive tensions can uncover similar tensions at work within diverse contemporary interpretive contexts. Through the uncomfortable work of turning towards what has previously been framed out of interpretations of Ruth, I explore how the narrative might become a conversation partner in noticing and naming entanglements of the idyllic and the exploitative.

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Citation

Lindsay, Rebecca. It’s a Charming Story of Faithful Living, but …: Interpretive Tensions in the Book of Ruth. Ruth. Equinox eBooks Publishing, United Kingdom. p. Nov 2026. ISBN 9781000000000. https://www.equinoxpub.com/home/view-chapter/?id=46472. Date accessed: 07 May 2024 doi: 10.1558/equinox.46472. Nov 2026

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