The article focuses on the scholarly neglect of the interpretation of Naamah as the wife of Ham, which has played a role in anti-Catholic religious polemics in England and U.S. It informs on the influence of the Anglican bishop Richard Cumberland's interpretation of Naamah as the wife of Ham in his anti-Catholic polemic. It also informs on her marriage to Hamin anti-miscegenation and proslavery readings of the curse of Ham in the U.S. focusing on John Fletcher's book "Studies on Slavery."
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