Category:Women Authorship--1930s

From 4 Enoch: : The Online Encyclopedia of Second Temple Judaism, and Christian and Islamic Origins
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The page: Women Authorship--1930s, includes (in chronological order) scholarly and fictional works on Second Temple Judaism (Jewish, Christian, and Islamic Origins), authored by Women in the 1930s, or from 1930 to 1939.


Women Authorship (1930s) -- History of research -- Overview
Women Authorship (1930s) -- History of research -- Overview

An ordained minister in the Church of the Nazarene, Olive May Winchester was the first woman admitted to and graduated from (1912) the Bachelor of Divinity program at the University of Glasgow, Scotland, and first woman ever ordained by any Christian denomination in Scotland. Professor of Biblical literature at Northwest Nazarene College (1918-1935) and Pasadena College (1935-1947), she completed in 1932 a biographical work on the Historical Jesus.

A graduate from the University of Chicago, Mary Edith Andrews published in 1934 a book on Paul in which she denounced the prevalent anti-Jewish interpretation of the apostle, arguing that Paul had offered in his letters a biased and "distorted" view of Judaism, to which no historical value should be given.

In literature, Sara Bard Field and Catherine Christian composed poetry and historical novels on Christian Origins.

In the arts, American painter Minerva Teichert emerged as one of the most respected interpreters of Mormon visual art.

After completing her trilogy on Paul in 1930 and 1933, Irish visionary Cummings began to write on Jesus in 1937.


Women Authorship (1930s) -- Highlights
Women Authorship (1930s) -- Highlights


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