"Kanarek's insightful feminist reading of Bavli Sotah traces how a disturbing ritual designed to expose and humiliate women accused of adultery is transformed, through rabbinic legal and narrative discourse, into an opportunity to articulate the values and practices of a pious society. Kanarek persuasively models a new way of reading rabbinic literature that assumes that women played a role in the world of the rabbis and impacts our understanding--from individual passages to the corpus writ large."
--Sarit Kattan Gribetz, Yale University
"A deeply persuasive argument for reading Bavli Sotah as a cohesive tractate that subverts and reframes the brutality of the biblical and Mishnaic accounts of the sotah ritual. With scholarly insight, Kanarek integrates Talmudic and feminist methodologies to illuminate a rabbinic turn away from female transgression and toward shaping the ideal male. A critical resource for investigating the sotah ritual."--Marjorie Lehman, Jewish Theological Seminary