Difference between revisions of "Literary Devices – Bereshit 37/0"

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<subcategory>Dreams of Heaven and Earth
<p>Yosef’s first dream concerns produce of the earth and his second dream concerns the heavens, as Yaakov’s dream in Bereshit 28 represented a bridging of heaven and earth with angels going up and down the ladder between the land and sky.</p>
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<p>Yosef’s first dream concerns produce of the earth and his second dream concerns the heavens.&#160; This recalls Yaakov’s dream in Bereshit 28 represented a bridging of heaven and earth with angels going up and down the ladder between the land and sky.</p>
 
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<subcategory>Clothing
<p>Clothes are an important symbol in the Yosef story. In this chapter, Yosef is given a coat that represents Yaakov’s love, and his brothers later strip him of the coat and use it to deceive Yaakov. Yaakov later loses his clothes again when Potiphar’s wife pulls them off of him. He is given new clothes when he is taken from prison to appear before Pharaoh, and again when he becomes Pharaoh’s viceroy. He later gives gifts of clothing to his brothers. For analysis of the meaning of clothing in the Yosef story, see Joseph and the Imagery of Clothing by Samuel Borodach.</p>
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<p>Clothes are an important symbol in the Yosef story. In this chapter, Yosef is given a coat that represents Yaakov’s love, and his brothers later strip him of the coat and use it to deceive Yaakov. Yaakov later loses his clothes again when Potiphar’s wife pulls them off of him. He is gi&#160; ven new clothes when he is taken from prison to appear before Pharaoh, and again when he becomes Pharaoh’s viceroy. He later gives gifts of clothing to his brothers. For analysis of the meaning of clothing in the Yosef story, see Joseph and the Imagery of Clothing by Samuel Borodach.</p>
 
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Version as of 08:08, 9 July 2023

Literary Devices – Bereshit 37

This topic has not yet undergone editorial review

Binary Sturcture

In his commentary on Bereshit,1 Robert Alter points out that Yosef’s story is structured as a series of doublets (as was Yaakov’s story; see Chapter 32). Yosef and Paroh both have double dreams, the baker and butler present their dreams together, Yosef is thrown into a pit and then into prison, the brothers make two trips to Egypt, and their descent to Egypt parallels Yosef’s descent.

Key Words

Family Relations

  • Tanakh Lab points out that the three words that appear most frequently in Bereshit 27 are אח, אב and בן, underscoring the tragic enmity and deception between close relatives that characterizes the story of the sale of Yosef.  These words appear most poignantly in Yosef’s declaration “I seek my brothers” and Yehuda’s chilling statement: “Come, let us sell him to the Yishmaelites, and let our hands not be upon him, for he is our brother, our flesh.”
  • See Tamar and Yosef by Professor Yonatan Grossman for analysis of the repetition of the word "אח", and specifically how Yehuda’s use of the word conveys that his actions may be even more immoral than those of his brothers. 

Character Titles

Symbolism

Dreams of Heaven and Earth

Yosef’s first dream concerns produce of the earth and his second dream concerns the heavens.  This recalls Yaakov’s dream in Bereshit 28 represented a bridging of heaven and earth with angels going up and down the ladder between the land and sky.

Clothing

Clothes are an important symbol in the Yosef story. In this chapter, Yosef is given a coat that represents Yaakov’s love, and his brothers later strip him of the coat and use it to deceive Yaakov. Yaakov later loses his clothes again when Potiphar’s wife pulls them off of him. He is gi  ven new clothes when he is taken from prison to appear before Pharaoh, and again when he becomes Pharaoh’s viceroy. He later gives gifts of clothing to his brothers. For analysis of the meaning of clothing in the Yosef story, see Joseph and the Imagery of Clothing by Samuel Borodach.

Allusions

  • The goat and garment that the brothers use to deceive Yaakov are reminiscent of the goat and garment used by Yaakov to deceive Yitzchak in Bereshit 27. Similarly, the brothers’ command to Yaakov to recognize his son’s cloak (“haker na”), and his recognition of the cloak (verses 32-33) are reminiscent of Yitzchak’s inability to recognize Yaakov’s true identity when he disguised himself as Esav (Bereshit 27:23).

These are examples of the ways in which the stories of deceit and rivalry at the beginning of Yaakov’s life haunt him as well as his children, who continue the pattern of deception with the sale of Yosef.