Ideas to Jump-Start Your own Creative Interpretations
Ideas to Jump-Start Your own Creative Interpretations
Choose one of these verses and write, draw, dance or sing about it:
- She saw that Shelah was grown up, yet she had not been given to him as wife (Verse 14).
- When Judah saw her, he took her for a harlot; for she had covered her face. (Verse 15)
- "I am with child by the man to whom these belong." (Verse 25)
- Judah recognized them, and said, "She is more in the right than I” (Verse 26)
- What the Midrash learns from Tamar: “Better for a person to throw himself into a fiery furnace rather than shame someone else in public.”
Or try one of these:
Visual
Costume design: draw Tamar might have worn for her seduction if it happened in ancient times, or today
Create a collage based on the theme of “willful un-seeing” and hiddenness
Music
Write a seduction song, with or without words, that Tamar might use to lure Judah in
Write a chant for Tamar using these words, which the Midrash puts in her mouth: “May it be your will, Adonai my God, that I not go out empty from this house.”
Movement
Create a dance describing Tamar’s transformation over the course of the story
Using a veil (or scarf), create a dance that depicts Tamar’s feelings during the seduction scene
Writing
Write a journal entry by Tamar the morning after the encounter
One of the themes in this story is willful unseeing. When have you felt willfully unseen? Have you used it to your advantage? Have you felt hurt by it? When have you willfully not seen others?
Summarize Tamar’s story in six words