RT Article T1 Feeling the Burn: Angry Brothers, Adamant Sister, and Affective Relations in the Song of Songs (1:5-6; 8:8-12) JF The catholic biblical quarterly VO 81 IS 3 SP 405 OP 428 A1 Spencer, Franklin Scott LA English YR 2019 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/1676531076 AB This study aims to flesh out the tense affective relations in the Songs of Songs between the female protagonist and her hostile brothers (Song 1:5-6; 8:8-12). Based on close textual analysis informed by biblical anger prototypes, Aristotelian rhetoric, and modern theories of emotion focused on appraisal, metaphor, affective stylistics, and script performance, I propose that the young woman character constructed in the Song attributes her brothers' ire to their perceived social belittlement resulting from her independent pursuit of love beyond their control. Accordingly, this putative slighting ignites their "action tendency" to keep their little - and belittling - sister under wraps through forced vineyard labor under the scorching sun. Their scheme backfires, however, as she refuses to be "walled" up by her brothers to boost their emotional, social, and economic interests. With remarkable vitality in the face of vulnerability, she persists in flipping their script and affirming her own identity: "My vineyard, my very own, is for myself" (8:12). K1 Anger K1 EMOTIONS (Psychology) K1 Group Identity K1 Interpersonal Relations K1 Social Change K1 Song of Songs K1 Affect K1 Beloved K1 Black K1 Brother K1 Fire K1 Love K1 performance sister DO 10.1353/cbq.2019.0138