Thank you, yes. The big point to be made there is that everything becomes spiritual in the NT. The Church is a female figure and should be understood in terms of a beautiful woman who is, on some level, deadly (to Jesus, literally, and spiritually to evil powers).
In this movement, Christian men become ‘women’ spiritually, and so men & women together can be understood as a . . . dangerous lady.
But of specific women, obviously Mary the mother of Jesus is a sexual female who is dangerous to the Roman empire. Mary Magdalene I read (this gets involved) as an exorcist who attacks demonic power, requiring Jesus to repeatedly exorcise her. I think the Samaritan Woman can be read as a nubile female who suddenly takes headship of her people. Jesus interacts with her as a spiritual representative of Samaria.
The very interesting prophetesses of the NT (ie. Acts 2:17), and the violence that Jewish men register in hearing female voices (the subject of 1 Corinthians 14:34) are all really interesting to consider.