Buch, Englisch, Band 186, 452 Seiten, Format (B × H): 160 mm x 241 mm, Gewicht: 862 g
Essays on the Deuteronomistic History, Chronicles, and Ezra-Nehemiah
Buch, Englisch, Band 186, 452 Seiten, Format (B × H): 160 mm x 241 mm, Gewicht: 862 g
Reihe: Vetus Testamentum, Supplements
ISBN: 978-90-04-44485-0
Verlag: Brill
Shortly before his untimely death Gary Knoppers prepared a number of articles on the historical books in the Hebrew Bible for this volume. Many had not previously been published and the others were heavily revised. They combine a fine attention to historical method with sensitivity for literary-critical analysis, constructive use of classical as well as other sources for comparative evidence, and wide-ranging attention to economic, social, religious, and political circumstances relating in particular to the Persian and early Hellenistic periods. Knoppers advances many new suggestions about significant themes in these texts, about how they relate one to another, and about the light they shed on the various communities’ self-consciousness at a time when new religious identities were being forged.
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Contents
Preface
Sources
Abbreviations
Introduction
H.G.M. Williamson
Part 1: History and Historiography in Ancient Judah
1 Constructing the Israelite Past in Ancient Judah (I)
1 Introductory Observations
2 Chronological Segmentation and Typology in Deuteronomistic Historiography
2 From Israel to Judah in the Deuteronomistic Writing: A History of Calamities?
1 Challenges Posed by Deuteronomy’s Mandate for the Unification of Yahwistic Worship
2 From the Steppes of Moab to the City of David
3 “Cast from My Presence”: The Promises Annulled?
4 From Solomon to the End of the Davidic Kingdom
5 Conclusions
3 Constructing the Israelite Past in Ancient Judah (II)
1 Introductory Observations
2 Selectivity and Segmentation in Ezra-Nehemiah
3 Selection and Segmentation in the Chronistic Writing
4 Conclusions
Part 2: Mimesis, Prophetic Succession, and Scribal Prophecy
4 Synoptic Texts, Mimesis, and the Problem of “Rewritten Bible”
1 Old is Good: An Overview of Mimesis in the Ancient World
2 Reliving the Past? Examples of Mimetic Literature in the Ancient World
3 Rewritten Bible or Mimesis?
4 Out with the Old, In with the New: Disputes and Dangers in the Use of Mimesis
5 Conclusions
5 Theft or Mimesis? The Non-Citation of Older Writings in Chronicles
1 Chronicles and Joshua
2 The Source Citations in Chronicles and in Kings
3 Conclusions
6 “As It is Written”: What Were the Chronicler’s Prophetic Sources?
1 Prophetic Sources in Chronicles: Recent Studies
2 Written Prophetic Works—Unity amid Diversity?
3 Prophetic Sources and the Evaluation of the Past
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