In Reading Phinehas, Watching Slashers, Brandon R. Grafius enlists horror theory, especially analysis of the slasher film genre, to elucidate the account in Numbers 25 featuring Phinehas jointly spearing a Midianite woman and an Israelite man who seem to be engaged in sexual intercourse. Grafius contends this “rhetorical violence” is part of a priestly attempt to reinforce social boundaries within the ancient Israelite community (xiii). He explores this concept throughout five chapters of the monograph, followed by a brief conclusion.Overall, Grafius’ work is a success. It is well written and logically organized. It features a broad analytical approach, granting a satisfying balance between assessments of ancient texts and modern interpretive models. It is concise and yet it sufficiently highlights most of the relevant research on Numbers 25, horror theory, and slasher film analysis. Moreover, the connections between horror theory and religion are numerous and underexplored. As such, this book is a welcome attempt to bridge that gap.
— Reading Religion
Author, Brandon Grafius shows the appropriateness of horror theory as a tool for uncovering valuable insights concerning the communities responsible for horrific texts. Overall his methodology is not formulaic nor are his conclusions predictable, but rather his careful interpretation brings a fresh perspective to a troubling text, and this work should be a welcome read for advanced undergraduate and graduate students in biblical studies, especially those interested in the priestly school, horror theory, or creative approaches to the Bible and film.
— Religious Studies Review
There is much to admire about this fine book. I cannot help but admire a historical critic who is open to “theory” or poststructuralism—and one for that matter who has clearly read some of these theorists, rather than depending as many do on secondary sources. Further, I esteem Grafius’s honest, forthright appraisal of the horror of (some) biblical narrative. In fact, such ethical appraisals might lead to further rapprochement between historical criticism and theory or back to the beginning of our discipline.— Society Of Biblical Literature
In this interesting and innovative book, G. combines historical-critical exegesis together with psychoanalytical and social-scientific approaches to horror films in order to interpret the story of Phinehas’ violent dispatch of Zimri and Cozbi. . . The study is well-written and clearly organized. . . A provocative and engaging study.
— Journal for the Study of the Old Testament
Grafius applies horror theory to Numbers 25 with the skill and expertise of a knife-wielding villain in a slasher movie to reveal new psychological, emotional, and literary dimensions of this bloody biblical story. This is a thorough, novel, and illuminating study that complements and enriches classical understandings of and methodological approaches to the Phinehas story. Grafius demonstrates how horror theory is an invaluable tool for excavating layers of meaning within biblical texts, while exposing a core component of this narrative that feels integral to it and, no doubt, to many other biblical texts. Combining depth and originality, expertise and creativity, this study is an important contribution to the field of biblical studies. — Amy Kalmanofsky, The Jewish Theological Seminary
This is a very interesting and innovative attempt to deal with a problematic biblical text. On the one hand, the author does not flinch from its problematic nature. On the other, he offers a sophisticated modern way of appreciating the mentality that underlies it in a sympathetic way.— John J. Collins, Yale Divinity School
This book represents what is truly emerging within biblical studies—a creative engagement with one of the Hebrew Bible’s most ethically problematic texts, drawing from traditional methods yet transversing disciplinary boundaries to reap the benefits of horror theory, psychoanalysis, violence studies, reception history, and even film studies. Here is a testament to how the interdisciplinary nature of today’s biblical scholarship can set aside old rivalries among presumably competing methods in favor of a more fully orbed—often unwieldy and unfinalized, but always meaningful—reading of biblical texts.— Brad E. Kelle, Point Loma Nazarene University; author of The Bible and Moral Injury: Reading Scripture Alongside War’s Unseen Wounds
Brandon R. Grafius combines multiple forms of biblical criticism (historical and rhetorical) with horror theory to argue that Numbers 25 is the biblical version of a modern-day horror film. Phinehas becomes the avenging, monstrous slasher, restoring order through violence. Grafius has written a thoughtful work of scholarship that entertains as it informs.— Stacy Davis, St. Mary’s College