Description
Sarah Emanuel’s “Humor, Resistance and Jewish Cultural Persistence in the Book of Revelation: Roasting Rome” offers a groundbreaking analysis of how early Jewish Christians used satire and dark humor as weapons against Roman domination. The book demonstrates that the Apocalypse of John, often read as purely eschatological prophecy, functions simultaneously as biting social commentary and cultural resistance literature.
Emanuel argues that the text’s vivid, often grotesque imagery—from the beast to Babylon—serves as mockery and ridicule of Roman imperial ideology and power structures. By rooting this analysis in Jewish cultural traditions and literary conventions, she reveals how marginalized communities preserved their identity and agency through sardonic wit and apocalyptic rhetoric. This interpretation reshapes our understanding of Revelation not merely as mystical vision but as sharp political satire grounded in Jewish persistence and survival strategies.







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