So in trying to gain a better understanding of polygyny I looked for resources and some of them were weird and scary. All of the polyamory books were a little bizarre and some of the polygamy books just seemed too Mormonish for me. (Nothing against Mormons but I'm Eastern Orthodox and it doesn't translate very well for my religious perspective.)
This book is a bit scholarly and not written from a religious perspective but focuses on three distinct religious communities: African Hebrew Israelites, a weird new age group that seemed fuzzy, and American Muslims. It's also with a very distinct ethnic and political bias.
BUT... I found it fascinating. The fuzzy group was just fuzzy, but the Hebrew group had the most fascinating testimonies of women, mostly positive but realistic about the struggles. I kept highlighting like crazy. It was very refreshing and reminded me of how I have seen some folks on here talk about polygyny.
The fuzzy group was just fuzzy, but the section on Muslims was also fascinating because the lack of communication usually results in the destruction of the first marriage when a man marries a second wife. It was handled very differently from either Hebrew groups or Mormons.
I'm curious if anyone else has read this book and what they thought of it.
Here's a quote I really liked because it reminded me of Psalm 113:
This book is a bit scholarly and not written from a religious perspective but focuses on three distinct religious communities: African Hebrew Israelites, a weird new age group that seemed fuzzy, and American Muslims. It's also with a very distinct ethnic and political bias.
BUT... I found it fascinating. The fuzzy group was just fuzzy, but the Hebrew group had the most fascinating testimonies of women, mostly positive but realistic about the struggles. I kept highlighting like crazy. It was very refreshing and reminded me of how I have seen some folks on here talk about polygyny.
The fuzzy group was just fuzzy, but the section on Muslims was also fascinating because the lack of communication usually results in the destruction of the first marriage when a man marries a second wife. It was handled very differently from either Hebrew groups or Mormons.
I'm curious if anyone else has read this book and what they thought of it.
Here's a quote I really liked because it reminded me of Psalm 113:
With regard to a third sister-wife, one woman explained, "She needed to get married; she had been single for awhile, and she was the type of sister that was so giving the she deserved a good family."