Journal for Interdisciplinary Biblical Studies (Jan 2020)

Transgender: A Useful Category of Biblical Analysis?

  • Jane Nichols and Rachel Stuart,
  • Rachel Stuart

DOI
https://doi.org/10.17613/ak2n-9z27
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1, no. 2
pp. 1 – 24

Abstract

Read online

This paper revolves around issues of anachronism and identity in moving toward a transgender hermeneutic of interpretation. Putting Joan W. Scott’s work on gender as a category of historical analysis in conversation with María Lugones’ and Oyèrónk?? Oyèwùmí’s discussions of gender and coloniality, the paper proposes the terminology of “gendered category” in order to resist colonialist assumptions inherent within the term “gender” and allow for more possibilities of analysis. With that grounding, the paper turns to an interpretation of the Jacob narratives in Genesis 25 and 27, arguing that the status of firstborn son (b?k?r) in the ancient Near East can be productively understood as a gendered category. It does not argue that Jacob is transgender in the sense of the modern identity marker, but rather that Jacob’s navigation and crossing of the gendered categories of his day carries certain compelling parallels to the ways in which transgender people today experience their identity across prescribed categories.

Keywords