Keefe, Alice A.2019-09-252019-09-252011-07-2519991522-5658http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/180258While feminist ideological critics urge us to "step outside" the ideology of patriarchal texts in order to critique it, social scientific criticism insists that unless we first "step into" the sociosymbolic world refracted through the text, our readings will be compromised by the projections of a modern worldview. This paper explores the tension between these two critical approaches through a focus on current ideological readings of biblical "pornoprophetics," that is, prophetic metaphors of promiscuous women who are stripped and raped as punishment for their transgressions. The conclusion that these images are indicative of misogynic attitudes in ancient Israel is challenged for its failure to account sufficiently for the difference between ancient and modern worldviews.engWith permission of the license/copyright holdergender ethicsfeminismideologyfeminist theologyCommunity ethicsLifestyle ethicsSocial ethicsFamily ethicsSexual orientation/genderIntercultural and contextual theologiesGender and theologyFeminist theologiesLiberation theologiesStepping In / Stepping Out:A Conversation between Ideological and Social Scientific Feminist Approaches to the BibleArticle