Katharine Doob Sakenfeld is the William Albright Eisenberger Professor of Old Testament Literature and Exegesis at Princeton
Theological Seminary. Professor Sakenfeld's area of expertise includes the narratives concerning the pre-monarchic
period, Methods (including Feminist Interpretation), and Sociology of the Old Testament. She is a member of many academic and
professional associations, including the Society of Biblical Literature (where she serves on a number of committees) and
Catholic Biblical Association. Her editorial board service includes the Journal of Biblical Literature, Theology Today, Bible
Review, Word and World, and many other ecumenical and denominational boards. Her publications include The Meaning of Hesed in
the Hebrew Bible (Scholars Press), Faithfulness in Action: Loyalty in Biblical Perspective (Fortress Press), commentaries on
Numbers (Eerdmans) and Ruth (John Knox), and Just Wives?: Stories of Power and Survival in the Old Testament Today. Her
published articles have appeared in Catholic Biblical Quarterly, Theology Today, Interpretation, and the Journal for the
Study of the Old Testament, as well as journals published in Korea, Taiwan, the Philippines, and South Africa.