Standing Again at Sinai Literary Elements

Standing Again at Sinai Literary Elements

Genre

Religious commentary

Setting and Context

The novel is written in the context of Judaism and Feminism.

Narrator and Point of View

First-Person narration and point of view

Tone and Mood

Antagonizing, sad, optimistic

Protagonist and Antagonist

The narrator, Judith, is the protagonist of the story.

Major Conflict

The major conflict occurs when the Torah is written to dehumanize women but favors men in all aspects. The Torah does not give women the freedom to do as they wish compared to their male counterparts.

Climax

The climax is when the narrator concludes that the Torah has to be rewritten to give women their rightful place in society.

Foreshadowing

The involvement of women in leadership foreshadows a revolution in which the Jewish women will demand their rightful place in society.

Understatement

The symbol of the Jewish religion is underestimated. Even though men are the sole leaders in religion, they are also dominant in societal matters, ensuring that the Jewish women are enslaved to see men as demi-gods.

Allusions

The story alludes to the dark side of religion, which is partial to humanity as a whole.

Imagery

Images of women suffrage are rampant throughout the novel.

Paradox

The main paradox is that the contribution of Jewish women in history is not documented in the Torah. For instance, women's significance is only mentioned in the liturgy but not in Jewish law.

Parallelism

The story of Sarah and Rebecca parallels the history of Jewish women.

Metonymy and Synecdoche

N/A

Personification

The Torah is personified to have the ability to decide the fate of the Jewish women.

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