Christianson, Eric2012-12-112012-12-112007-01-01Biblical Interpretation: A Journal of Contemporary Approaches, 15(4), 2007, pp. 519-5480927-25691568-515210.1163/156851507X230296http://hdl.handle.net/10034/255214This article is not available through ChesterRep.This article discusses similaries between film noir and the book of Judges such as anxiety over constructs of masculinity and normality, interest in ritualized violence, fetishization of women, existential deliberation over character, resignation to the fate of the individual (and by extension the nation), withering acknowledgment of the façade of material progress — all expressed with indeterminate narrative modes that frustrate attempts at making meaning.enArchived with thanks to Biblical Interpretation: A Journal of Contemporary ApproachesJudges (Old Testament)film noirJaelambiguityThe big sleep: Strategic ambiguity in Judges 4-5 and in classic film noirArticleBiblical Interpretation: A Journal of Contemporary Approaches