The formation of the Pentateuch: bridging the academic cultures of Europe, Israel, and North America

Der Pentateuch ist einer der bekanntesten und wirkungsmächtigsten Texte der Weltliteratur. Trotz mehr als 200 Jahren kritischer Erforschung sind seine historischen Ursprünge und selbst die Umrisse seiner Literaturgeschichte in der wissenschaftlichen Diskussion stark umstritten. Man rechnet mit Quell...

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Bibliographic Details
Contributors: Gertz, Jan Christian 1964- (Editor) ; Levinson, Bernard M. 1952- (Editor) ; Rom-Shiloni, Dalit 1961- (Editor) ; Schmid, Konrad 1965- (Editor)
Format: Electronic Book
Language:English
Check availability: HBZ Gateway
WorldCat: WorldCat
Fernleihe:Fernleihe für die Fachinformationsdienste
Published: Tübingen Mohr Siebeck 2017
In: Forschungen zum Alten Testament (111)
Year: 2017
Reviews:[Rezension von: The formation of the Pentateuch : bridging the academic cultures of Europe, Israel, and North America] (2017) (Frevel, Christian, 1962 -)
[Rezension von: The Pentateuch : international perspectives on current research; The formation of the Pentateuch : bridging the academic cultures of Europe, Israel, and North America] (2020) (Steymans, Hans Ulrich, 1961 -)
Series/Journal:Forschungen zum Alten Testament 111
Standardized Subjects / Keyword chains:B Bible. Pentateuch, Bible. Pentateuch / Text history
B Bible. Pentateuch, Bible. Pentateuch / Prophets / Intertextuality
B Bible. Pentateuch, Bible. Pentateuch / Compounding (Textual linguistics) / Research
B Bible. Pentateuch, Bible. Pentateuch / Literary criticism
B Bible. Pentateuch, Bible. Pentateuch / Journalistic editing
B Bible / Canon
IxTheo Classification:HB Old Testament
Further subjects:B Space
B Collection of essays
B Hebrew Bible
B Forschungen zum Alten Testament
B Bible. Pentateuch
B Neutestamentliche Christologien
B Old Testament
B Passivity
B Affects
B Repräsentation Gottes
B history of science
B Literary criticism
B Array
B Archaeology
B Passion
B Fakultätsgeschichte
B Narrative theory
B Classical antiquity
B Biblical Studies
B Litarary History of the Bible
B Religion of Israel
B Antike Religionsgeschichte
B Disability studies
B Altes Testament
Online Access: Inhaltsverzeichnis (Aggregator)
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Parallel Edition:Non-electronic
Description
Summary:Der Pentateuch ist einer der bekanntesten und wirkungsmächtigsten Texte der Weltliteratur. Trotz mehr als 200 Jahren kritischer Erforschung sind seine historischen Ursprünge und selbst die Umrisse seiner Literaturgeschichte in der wissenschaftlichen Diskussion stark umstritten. Man rechnet mit Quellen, Fortschreibungen und Redaktionen, doch die in Israel, Europa und Nordamerika vertretenen Sichtweisen divergieren stark voneinander. Dieser Band dokumentiert die Hauptrichtungen der gegenwärtigen Forschung und versucht, methodische und inhaltliche Wege aufzuzeigen, um zu einer grundlegenden Klärung von Voraussetzungen und Arbeitsweisen der internationalen Pentateuchforschung zu gelangen.InhaltsübersichtJan Christian Gertz/Bernard M. Levinson/Dalit Rom-Shiloni/Konrad Schmid: Convergence and Divergence in Pentateuchal Theory 1. Empirical Perspectives on the Composition of the Pentateuch Jan Christian Gertz: Introduction – Christopher Rollston: Intellectual Infrastructure and the Writing of the Pentateuch: Empirical Models from Iron Age Inscriptions – David P. Wright: The Covenant Code Appendix (Exod 23:20–33), Neo-Assyrian Sources, and Implications for Pentateuchal Study – David M. Carr: Data to Inform Ongoing Debates about the Formation of the Pentateuch: From Documented Cases of Transmission History to Survey of Rabbinic Exegesis – Molly M. Zahn: Inner-Biblical Exegesis: The View from beyond the Bible – Armin Lange: From Many to One: Some Thoughts on the Textual Standardization of the Torah 2. Can the Pentateuch Be Read in its Present Form? Narrative Continuity in the Pentateuch in Comparative Perspective Jeffrey Stackert: Introduction – Jean Louis Ska: What Do We Mean by Plot and by Narrative Continuity? – Yairah Amit: Travel Narratives and the Message of Genesis – Joel S. Baden: Why is the Pentateuch Unreadable? or, Why Are We Doing This Anyway? – Jeffrey Stackert: Pentateuchal Coherence and the Science of Reading – Jean-Pierre Sonnet: Does the Pentateuch Tell of Its Redactional Genesis? The Characters of Yhwh and Moses as Agents of Fortschreibung in the Pentateuch's Narrated World 3. How to Date Biblical Texts? Shimon Gesundheit: The Strengths and Weaknesses of Linguistic Dating – Erhard Blum: The Linguistic Dating of Biblical Texts: An Approach with Methodical Limitations – Jan Joosten: Diachronic Linguistics and the Date of the Pentateuch – William Schniedewind: Linguistic Dating, Writing Systems, and the Pentateuchal Sources – Thomas Römer: How to Date Pentateuchal Texts: Some Case Studies – Noam Mizrahi: Historical Linguistics as a Chronological Control in Pentateuchal Research: The Linguistic Watershed of the Mid-Sixth Century BCE – Jakob Wöhrle: There's no Master Key! The Literary Character of the Priestly Stratum and the Formation of the Pentateuch – Frank H. Polak: Oral Platform and Language Usage in the Abraham Narrative – Frank H. Polak: Story Telling and Redaction: Varieties of Language Usage in the Exodus Narrative 4. The Significance of Second Temple Literature and the Dead Sea Scrolls for the Formation of the Pentateuch Bernard M. Levinson: Introduction – Sidnie White Crawford: What Constitutes a Scriptural Text? The History of Scholarship on Qumran Manuscript 4Q158 – Molly M. Zahn: Scribal Revision and the Composition of the Pentateuch: Methodological Questions Raised by 4Q158 Fragments 1–2 – Reinhard G. Kratz: Reworked Pentateuch and Pentateuchal Theory – Richard J. Bautch: »Holy Seed«: Ezra's Rhetoric and the Formation of the Pentateuch – Sara Japhet: What May Be Learned from Ezra-Nehemiah about the Composition of the Pentateuch? 5. Evidence for Redactional Activity in the Pentateuch Konrad Schmid: Introduction – Jean Louis Ska: Some Empirical Evidence in Favor of Redaction Criticism – Christoph Levin: The Pentateuch: A Compilation by Redactors – Konrad Schmid: Post-Priestly Additions in the Pentateuch: A Survey of Scholarship 6. The Integration of Pre-Existing Literary Material in the Pentateuch and the Impact Upon its Final Shape Joel S. Baden: Introduction – Rainer Albertz: Noncontinuous Literary Sources Taken up in the Book of Exodus – Itamar Kislev: The Story of the Gadites and the Reubenites (Numbers 32): A Case Study for an Approach to a Pentateuchal Text – Karin Finsterbusch: Integrating the Song of Moses into Deuteronomy and Reshaping the Narrative: Different Solutions in MT Deut 31:1–32:47 and (the Hebrew Vorlage of) LXX Deut 31:1–32:47 – David P. Wright: Source Dependence and the Development of the Pentateuch: The Case of Leviticus 24 7. Historical Geography of the Pentateuch and Archaeological Perspectives Jan Christian Gertz: Introduction – David Ben-Gad HaCohen: Biblical Criticism from a Geographer's Perspective: »Transjordan« as a Test Case – Israel Finkelstein/Thomas Römer: Early North Israelite »Memories« on Moab – Thomas B. Dozeman: The Historical Geography of the Pentateuch and Archaeological Perspectives – Jan Christian Gertz: Hezekiah, Moses, and the Nehushtan: Some Remarks on a Case Study for a Correlation of the History of Religion in the Monarchical Period with the History of the Formation of the Hebrew Bible – Angela Roskop Erisman: For the Border of the Ammonites Was … Where? Historical Geography and Biblical Interpretation in Numbers 21 8. Do the Pentateuchal Sources Extend into the Former Prophets? Konrad Schmid: Introduction – Baruch J. Schwartz: The Pentateuchal Sources and the Former Prophets: A Documentarian's Perspective – Cynthia Edenburg: Joshua 1–5 within Hexateuch, Enneateuch and Deuteronomistic History Models – Thomas Römer: The Problem of the Hexateuch 9. Rethinking the Relationship Between the Law and the Prophets Dalit Rom-Shiloni: Introduction – Konrad Schmid: The Prophets after the Law or the Law after the Prophets? Terminological, Biblical, and Historical Perspectives – Marvin A. Sweeney: Hosea's Reading of Pentateuchal Narratives: A Window for a Foundational E Stratum – Reinhard Achenbach: The Sermon on the Sabbath in Jer 17:19–27 and the Torah – Georg Fischer: ותפשׂי התורה לא ידעוני (Jer 2:8): The Relationship of the Book of Jeremiah to the Torah – Dalit Rom-Shiloni: Compositional Harmonization: Priestly and Deuteronomic References in Jeremiah—An Earlier Stage of a Recognized Interpretive Technique – John Kessler: Patterns of »Descriptive Curse Formulae« in the Hebrew Bible, with Special Attention to Leviticus 26 and Amos 4:6–12 – Mark J. Boda: Reading Zechariah 9–14 with the Law and the Prophets: Sibling Rivalry and Prophetic Crisis – Jakob Wöhrle: Jacob, Moses, and Levi: Pentateuchal Figures in the Book of the Twelve – Christophe Nihan: Branching Mosaic and Prophetic Discourses on the Exile: Leviticus 26 and Ezekiel – Ariel Kopilovitz: What Kind of Priestly Writings did Ezekiel Know? The Case of Leviticus 26 – Michael A. Lyons: How Have We Changed? Older and Newer Arguments about the Relationship of Ezekiel and the Holiness Code – Tova Ganzel/Risa Levitt Kohn: Ezekiel's Use of Leviticus 26 10. Reading for Unity, Reading for Multiplicity: Theological Implications of the Study of the Pentateuch's Composition Benjamin Sommer: Introduction – Benjamin Sommer: Book or Anthology? The Pentateuch as Jewish Scripture – Markus Witte: Methodological Reflections on a Theology of the Pentateuch – Jean-Pierre Sonnet: The Dynamic of Closure in the Pentateuch – James W. Watts: Narratives, Lists, Rhetoric, Ritual, and the Pentateuch as a Scripture
The Pentateuch lies at the heart of the Western humanities. Yet despite nearly two centuries of scholarship, its historical origins and its literary history are still a subject of intense discussion. Critical scholarship has isolated multiple layers of tradition, inconsistent laws, and narratives that could only have originated from separate communities within ancient Israel, and were joined together at a relatively late stage by a process of splicing and editing.Recent developments in academic biblical studies, however, jeopardize the revolutionary progress that has been accomplished over the last two centuries. The past forty years of scholarship have witnessed not simply a proliferation of intellectual models, but the fragmentation of discourse within the three main research centers of Europe, Israel, and North America. Even when they employ the same terminology (redactor, author, source, exegesis), scholars often mean quite different things. Concepts taken for granted by one group of scholars (such as the existence of the Elohist source) are dismissed out of hand by other scholarly communities.In effect, independent and sometimes competing scholarly discourses have emerged in Europe, Israel, and North America. Each centers on the Pentateuch, each operates with its own set of working assumptions, and each is confident of its own claims. This volume seeks to stimulate international discussion about the Pentateuch in order to help the discipline move toward a set of shared assumptions and a common discourse. With the wide range of perspectives examined, this publication is an invaluable resource for subsequent research.Survey of contentsJan Christian Gertz/Bernard M. Levinson/Dalit Rom-Shiloni/Konrad Schmid: Convergence and Divergence in Pentateuchal Theory 1. Empirical Perspectives on the Composition of the Pentateuch Jan Christian Gertz: Introduction – Christopher Rollston: Intellectual Infrastructure and the Writing of the Pentateuch: Empirical Models from Iron Age Inscriptions – David P. Wright: The Covenant Code Appendix (Exod 23:20–33), Neo-Assyrian Sources, and Implications for Pentateuchal Study – David M. Carr: Data to Inform Ongoing Debates about the Formation of the Pentateuch: From Documented Cases of Transmission History to Survey of Rabbinic Exegesis – Molly M. Zahn: Inner-Biblical Exegesis: The View from beyond the Bible – Armin Lange: From Many to One: Some Thoughts on the Textual Standardization of the Torah 2. Can the Pentateuch Be Read in its Present Form? Narrative Continuity in the Pentateuch in Comparative Perspective Jeffrey Stackert: Introduction – Jean Louis Ska: What Do We Mean by Plot and by Narrative Continuity? – Yairah Amit: Travel Narratives and the Message of Genesis – Joel S. Baden: Why is the Pentateuch Unreadable? or, Why Are We Doing This Anyway? – Jeffrey Stackert: Pentateuchal Coherence and the Science of Reading – Jean-Pierre Sonnet: Does the Pentateuch Tell of Its Redactional Genesis? The Characters of Yhwh and Moses as Agents of Fortschreibung in the Pentateuch's Narrated World 3. How to Date Biblical Texts? Shimon Gesundheit: The Strengths and Weaknesses of Linguistic Dating – Erhard Blum: The Linguistic Dating of Biblical Texts: An Approach with Methodical Limitations – Jan Joosten: Diachronic Linguistics and the Date of the Pentateuch – William Schniedewind: Linguistic Dating, Writing Systems, and the Pentateuchal Sources – Thomas Römer: How to Date Pentateuchal Texts: Some Case Studies – Noam Mizrahi: Historical Linguistics as a Chronological Control in Pentateuchal Research: The Linguistic Watershed of the Mid-Sixth Century BCE – Jakob Wöhrle: There's no Master Key! The Literary Character of the Priestly Stratum and the Formation of the Pentateuch – Frank H. Polak: Oral Platform and Language Usage in the Abraham Narrative – Frank H. Polak: Story Telling and Redaction: Varieties of Language Usage in the Exodus Narrative 4. The Significance of Second Temple Literature and the Dead Sea Scrolls for the Formation of the Pentateuch Bernard M. Levinson: Introduction – Sidnie White Crawford: What Constitutes a Scriptural Text? The History of Scholarship on Qumran Manuscript 4Q158 – Molly M. Zahn: Scribal Revision and the Composition of the Pentateuch: Methodological Questions Raised by 4Q158 Fragments 1–2 – Reinhard G. Kratz: Reworked Pentateuch and Pentateuchal Theory – Richard J. Bautch: »Holy Seed«: Ezra's Rhetoric and the Formation of the Pentateuch – Sara Japhet: What May Be Learned from Ezra-Nehemiah about the Composition of the Pentateuch? 5. Evidence for Redactional Activity in the Pentateuch Konrad Schmid: Introduction – Jean Louis Ska: Some Empirical Evidence in Favor of Redaction Criticism – Christoph Levin: The Pentateuch: A Compilation by Redactors – Konrad Schmid: Post-Priestly Additions in the Pentateuch: A Survey of Scholarship 6. The Integration of Pre-Existing Literary Material in the Pentateuch and the Impact Upon its Final Shape Joel S. Baden: Introduction – Rainer Albertz: Noncontinuous Literary Sources Taken up in the Book of Exodus – Itamar Kislev: The Story of the Gadites and the Reubenites (Numbers 32): A Case Study for an Approach to a Pentateuchal Text – Karin Finsterbusch: Integrating the Song of Moses into Deuteronomy and Reshaping the Narrative: Different Solutions in MT Deut 31:1–32:47 and (the Hebrew Vorlage of) LXX Deut 31:1–32:47 – David P. Wright: Source Dependence and the Development of the Pentateuch: The Case of Leviticus 24 7. Historical Geography of the Pentateuch and Archaeological Perspectives Jan Christian Gertz: Introduction – David Ben-Gad HaCohen: Biblical Criticism from a Geographer's Perspective: »Transjordan« as a Test Case – Israel Finkelstein/Thomas Römer: Early North Israelite »Memories« on Moab – Thomas B. Dozeman: The Historical Geography of the Pentateuch and Archaeological Perspectives – Jan Christian Gertz: Hezekiah, Moses, and the Nehushtan: Some Remarks on a Case Study for a Correlation of the History of Religion in the Monarchical Period with the History of the Formation of the Hebrew Bible – Angela Roskop Erisman: For the Border of the Ammonites Was … Where? Historical Geography and Biblical Interpretation in Numbers 21 8. Do the Pentateuchal Sources Extend into the Former Prophets? Konrad Schmid: Introduction – Baruch J. Schwartz: The Pentateuchal Sources and the Former Prophets: A Documentarian's Perspective – Cynthia Edenburg: Joshua 1–5 within Hexateuch, Enneateuch and Deuteronomistic History Models – Thomas Römer: The Problem of the Hexateuch 9. Rethinking the Relationship Between the Law and the Prophets Dalit Rom-Shiloni: Introduction – Konrad Schmid: The Prophets after the Law or the Law after the Prophets? Terminological, Biblical, and Historical Perspectives – Marvin A. Sweeney: Hosea's Reading of Pentateuchal Narratives: A Window for a Foundational E Stratum – Reinhard Achenbach: The Sermon on the Sabbath in Jer 17:19–27 and the Torah – Georg Fischer: ותפשׂי התורה לא ידעוני (Jer 2:8): The Relationship of the Book of Jeremiah to the Torah – Dalit Rom-Shiloni: Compositional Harmonization: Priestly and Deuteronomic References in Jeremiah—An Earlier Stage of a Recognized Interpretive Technique – John Kessler: Patterns of »Descriptive Curse Formulae« in the Hebrew Bible, with Special Attention to Leviticus 26 and Amos 4:6–12 – Mark J. Boda: Reading Zechariah 9–14 with the Law and the Prophets: Sibling Rivalry and Prophetic Crisis – Jakob Wöhrle: Jacob, Moses, and Levi: Pentateuchal Figures in the Book of the Twelve – Christophe Nihan: Branching Mosaic and Prophetic Discourses on the Exile: Leviticus 26 and Ezekiel – Ariel Kopilovitz: What Kind of Priestly Writings did Ezekiel Know? The Case of Leviticus 26 – Michael A. Lyons: How Have We Changed? Older and Newer Arguments about the Relationship of Ezekiel and the Holiness Code – Tova Ganzel/Risa Levitt Kohn: Ezekiel's Use of Leviticus 26 10. Reading for Unity, Reading for Multiplicity: Theological Implications of the Study of the Pentateuch's Composition Benjamin Sommer: Introduction – Benjamin Sommer: Book or Anthology? The Pentateuch as Jewish Scripture – Markus Witte: Methodological Reflections on a Theology of the Pentateuch – Jean-Pierre Sonnet: The Dynamic of Closure in the Pentateuch – James W. Watts: Narratives, Lists, Rhetoric, Ritual, and the Pentateuch as a Scripture
ISBN:3161538846
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1628/978-3-16-153884-1