Talk:A Price Above Rubies

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Untitled[edit]

The plot description says that Sonia is raped by Sender. Is that really what happened? I just finished watching it, and I didn't interpret that as a rape scene at all. Sonia never said no or resisted, either physically or emotionally, and she seemed in a significant away to be enjoying it. Yes, she was certainly uncomfortable, but I never doubted while watching that the sex was consensual. I was actually pretty surprised to come here and read this article and see "rape" in there. I'm hesitant to just remove it myself because maybe I totally misunderstood it. Am I wrong about this? Seems to me that at least it's supposed to be ambiguous.

(An addendum: Just read Roger Ebert's review of the film, and he states the sex is rape. That detail of the article here is clearly lifted -- in fact, plagiarized -- from the Ebert review. Ebert is a respected source, but he certainly doesn't get every detail right every time.) —Preceding unsigned comment added by 24.90.208.18 (talk) 04:52, 26 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

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This is an automated message regarding an image used on this page. The image File:A Price Above Rubies.jpg, found on A Price Above Rubies, has been nominated for deletion because it does not meet Wikipedia image policy. Please see the image description page for more details. If this message was sent in error (that is, the image is not up for deletion, or was left on the wrong talk page), please contact this bot's operator. STBotI (talk) 14:52, 28 December 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Title Derives from a Jewish Sabbath Tradition[edit]

Please review and or revert as needed. Clarification of Jewish tradition; the quote 'price far above rubies' is a stanza from the weekly Sabbath table chant preceding the obligatory Shabbath toast (kiddush).

The title derives from a Jewish Sabbath tradition. The acrostic Sabbath chant The Woman of Valor (eishet chayil) which begins with the verse "... Who can find a woman of valor, her price is far above rubies ... ," which in turn is excerpted from The Book of Proverbs. This chant traditionally is a prelude to the weekly toast (kiddush) which begins the Sabbath meal.[1][2] B'H. 172.250.246.150 (talk) 19:09, 19 December 2018 (UTC)[reply]

References

  1. ^ [1], TheTorah.com, Who is the Eishet Chayil?, by Jacqueline Vantrub, 2014-06-26, retrieved 2018-12-19
  2. ^ [2], Aish.com, Eishet Chayil; A Special Shabbat Song in Honor of the Jewish Woman, by Lori Palatnik, 2004-05-15, retrieved 2018-12-19