Buch, Englisch, 382 Seiten, Format (B × H): 161 mm x 240 mm, Gewicht: 734 g
Buch, Englisch, 382 Seiten, Format (B × H): 161 mm x 240 mm, Gewicht: 734 g
ISBN: 978-0-19-964553-4
Verlag: ACADEMIC
Since the rise of critical biblical study in the nineteenth century there has been a revolution in the way that we interpret the Bible and in the methods we employ to facilitate our reading. Professor John Barton has been a major recent influence upon such developments and this volume, written by friends, former doctoral students and colleagues, reflects upon his contribution. A generation of scholars has engaged with, adopted and further developed Professor Barton's nuanced and careful explication of method, as exemplified particularly in his book Reading the Old Testament: Method in Biblical Study. This volume is a tribute to his pioneering influence upon our field. The book divides into two parts. In the first, 'Revisiting Older Approaches', older methods in biblical studies such as source criticism and textual criticism are reviewed, both as methods and in relation to worked examples. In the second part, entitled 'Breaking the Mould', newer types of criticism such as sociological, feminist and post-colonial readings are explored, again in relation to particular texts and examples. The book asks questions about the benefits and shortcomings of the methodological tools in our biblical critical tool-box and about the way texts are themselves brought to life in ever fresh interpretative and often interdisciplinary contexts. An array of distinguished contributors comes together in this volume to pay tribute to the honorand and to explore from a diversity of angles that ever intriguing, ever 'new' book - the Bible.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
- Part I. Revisiting Older Approaches
- 1.: David J. A. Clines: Source Criticism 3: Putting Source Criticism in its Place: The Flood Story as a Test Case
- 2.: Stuart Weeks: Form Criticism 15: The Limits of Form Criticism in the Study of Literature, with Reflections on Psalm 34
- 3.: H. G. M. Williamson: Redaction Criticism 26: The Vindication of Redaction Criticism
- 4.: Alison Salvesen: Textual Criticism 37: Textual and Literary Criticism and the Book of Exodus: The Role of the Septuagint
- 5.: John Muddiman: Historical Criticism 52: Truth in Biblical Criticism
- 6.: Susan E. Gillingham: The Quest for Plain Meaning 63: Talking to the Gods in the Psalms: Pursuing Bartons Plain Meaning Approach
- 7.: John Day: Comparative Ancient Near Eastern Study 74: The Genesis Flood Narrative in Relation to Ancient Near Eastern Flood Accounts
- 8.: Anselm C. Hagedorn: Canonical Formation 89: Canons and Curses: Some Observations on the Canon-Formula in Deuteronomy and its Afterlife
- 9.: Rainer Albertz: The Bible and the Church I 106: The Legacy of Claus Westermann for Theology and Church
- 10.: erhard Sauter: The Bible and the Church II 120: The Bible within Systematic Theology
- Part II. Breaking the Mould
- 11.: Christopher Rowland: Liberationist Reading 133: Popular Interpretation of the Bible in Brazil
- 12.: Daniel Smith-Christopher: Sociological Approaches 149: And if not now, when? A Sociology of Reading Micahs Notions of the Future in Micah 4:1
- 13.: Paula Gooder: Feminist Criticism 163: Apostles, Deacons, Patrons, Co-workers, and Heads of Household: Women Leaders in the Pauline Communities
- 14.: Christopher Seitz: Canonical Approaches 176: Scriptural Author and Canonical Prophet: The Theological Implications of Literary Association in the Canon
- 15.: N. T. Wright: Narrative Theology 189: The Evangelists Use of the Old Testament as an Implicit Overarching Narrative
- 16.: Will Kynes: Intertextuality 201: Intertextuality: Method and Theory in Job and Psalm 119
- 17.: John Jarick: Intratextuality 214: Cross-Examining Chronicles: Adventures in the Story-World of a Notionally Historical Narrative
- 18.: Francesca Stavrakopoulou: Materialist Reading 223: Materialism, Materiality, and Biblical Cults of Writing
- 19.: Mark G. Brett: Postcolonial Interpretation 243: Unequal Terms: A Postcolonial Approach to Isaiah 61
- 20.: Ellen van Wolde: Cognitive Linguistics 257: A Cognitive Linguistic Study of the Concept of Defilement in Ezekiel 22:116
- 21.: Paul M. Joyce: Psychological Interpretation 272: Dancing David: A Psychological Reading of 2 Samuel 6
- 22.: Katharine J. Dell: The Bible and the Arts 285: The Bible and Music: Hearing Elijah through the Oratorio Tradition
- 23.: Andrew Mein: Ethics and the Bible I 297: The Case of the Confiscated Cloak: Approaching Ancient Judahite Ethics
- 24.: Yvonne Sherwood: Ethics and the Bible II 311: The Perverse Commitment to Overcrowding and Doubling in Genesis: Implications for Ethics and Politics
- Bibliography of Works by John Barton 329
- Index of Biblical References 339
- Index of Subjects 353




