Son To The Misfortune Of Tamar example essay topic
After two of Judah's son's died while married to Tamar, he was especially wary of subjecting his youngest and last remaining son to the misfortune of Tamar so he commanded her to "Remain a widow in [her] father's house until [his] son Shelah [grew] up" (NRSV 50). Tamar returned home with nothing to show for her loss of virginity, making her less than nothing status-wise. It is apparent that Judah has no intentions of letting Tamar marry his son Judah, therefore defying the law of the levirate and effectively sealing Tamar's fate. Tamar took matters into her own hands at this point. When she heard that Judah would be passing her town to go shear his sheep she posed as a prostitute and solicited sex from him with intentions of becoming pregnant. In exchange she was to be paid a sheep, however, as collateral she took his signet ring, its cord, and his staff, which were all marked with Judah's seal (WBC 26).
Tamar, now impregnated, resumed her position as widow and was nowhere to be found when Judah returned. This is point at which her dichotomous situation is most apparent. It is obvious that Tamar accepted the levirate policy; this submission was the only way she knew how to regain her status. However, as it was designed, the execution of the policy was in the hands of the father. Judah was not following through and Tamar took her salvation into her own hands. Her acceptance only went so far, she was willing to accept her submissive status as a possession of Judah's clan because it was guaranteed.
In the desperate position that she was forced into Tamar made the decision to subversively regain her guarantee. When it is discovered that Tamar is pregnant, Judah orders her to be burned (NRSV 50). It is at this point that she presents Judah's identifying possessions, publicly placing him in the hot spot. Judah has no other choice but to admit his own fault. Tamar had backed him into a corner; he has not only broken the levirate but committed incest. Tamar is abdicated of all blame by Judah.
He states that "She is more in the right than I, since I did not give her to my son Shelah" (NRSV 51). Tamar used this system to gain her rights of submission. It is an ironic situation; she overpowered men and defied laws just to attain the accepted status of compliance and the proper execution of a law demanding obedience..