Inscribe it in a book: scribal practice, cultural memory, and the making of the Hebrew scriptures

Die Teilbereiche der Mündlichkeit und Schriftkultur innerhalb der Forschung zur Hebräischen Bibel führt zu allmählichen Verschiebungen auf diesem Gebiet. Die theoretischen und empirischen Beiträge in diesem Band tragen zur laufenden Diskussion innerhalb der Bibelwissenschaft und angrenzender Gebiete...

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Bibliographic Details
Contributors: Ro, Johannes Unsok 1971- (Editor) ; Giffone, Benjamin D. 1984- (Editor)
Format: Electronic Book
Language:English
Check availability: HBZ Gateway
Fernleihe:Fernleihe für die Fachinformationsdienste
Published: Tübingen Mohr Siebeck [2022]
In:Year: 2022
Series/Journal:Forschungen zum Alten Testament 2. Reihe 139
Standardized Subjects / Keyword chains:B Old Testament / Scribe / Authorship
B Old Testament / Orality / Literalness / Collective memory / Text history
B Old Testament / Writing (Motif) / Scribe (Motif)
B Old Testament / Exegesis / Writing / Literary production
IxTheo Classification:HB Old Testament
Further subjects:B Forschungen zum Alten Testament 2. Reihe
B Collection of essays
B Writing in the Hebrew Bible
B Hebrew Bible
B Biblical Studies
B Scribal culture and practice
B Altes Testament
Online Access: Presumably Free Access
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Parallel Edition:Non-electronic
Erscheint auch als: 9783161615245
Description
Summary:Die Teilbereiche der Mündlichkeit und Schriftkultur innerhalb der Forschung zur Hebräischen Bibel führt zu allmählichen Verschiebungen auf diesem Gebiet. Die theoretischen und empirischen Beiträge in diesem Band tragen zur laufenden Diskussion innerhalb der Bibelwissenschaft und angrenzender Gebiete über die Schreibprozesse bei, die biblische Texte hervorgebracht haben.InhaltsübersichtJohannes Unsok Ro and Benjamin D. Giffone: IntroductionPart I: Comparative Studies Daniel Bodi: A New Proposal for the Origin of the Term for 'Letter': Sumerian inim.gar, i5-gar-ra; Akkadian egirtu; Aramaic ʾiggĕrâ, ʾiggartâ, Hebrew ʾiggeret − William R. Stewart: The Death of the Prophet? A Comparative Study of Prophetic Signs in the Royal Archives of Mari, Syria (ARM 26/1.206) and the Hebrew Bible (Jeremiah 19:1–13) − JiSeong James Kwon: Scribal Intertexts in the Book of Job: Foreign Counterparts of Job − Sungwoo Park/Johannes Unsok Ro: Collective Identity through Scribalism: Interpreting Plato's Menexenus and the Book of Chronicles Part II: Writing about Writing in the Hebrew Bible Benjamin Kilchör: »Then Moses Wrote This Torah” (Deut 31:9): The Relationship of Oral and Written Torah in Deuteronomy − Lisbeth S. Fried/Edward J. Mills III: Ezra the Scribe − Johanna Erzberger: Israel's Salvation and the Survival of Baruch the Scribe − Peter Altmann: Tracing Divine Law: Written Divine Law in Chronicles Part III: Case Studies Jin H. Han: Did the Deuteronomist Detest Dreams? − Benjamin D. Giffone: Regathering Too Many Stones? Scribal Constraints, Community Memory, and the 'Problem' of Elijah's Sacrifice for Deuteronomism in Kings − Woo Min Lee: The »Remnant” in the Deuteronomistic Cultural Memory: A Case Study on 2 Kings 19:30–31 − Roger S. Nam: Nehemiah 5:1–13 as Innerbiblical Interpretation of Pentateuchal Slavery Laws − Kristin Weingart: Chronography in the Book of Kings: An Inquiry into an Israelite Manifestation of an Ancient Near Eastern Genre − Benjamin Ziemer: Radical Versus Conservative? How Scribes Conventionally Used Books While Writing Books
The subfield of orality and scribal culture within Hebrew Bible studies is leading to gradual shifts in the field, and the nuancing or displacement of entrenched ideas and approaches. The theoretical and empirical essays in this volume contribute to the ongoing conversation within biblical and cognate studies concerning the scribal processes that produced biblical texts. The topics in this volume include scribal education and scribal culture, including comparative studies; the interaction between scribal texts and cultural or collective memory within an oral culture; the overlap and intersections of the roles »prophet,” »priest,” and »scribe” in ancient Israel and beyond; and descriptions of writing and scribal process within biblical texts themselves.Survey of contentsJohannes Unsok Ro and Benjamin D. Giffone: IntroductionPart I: Comparative Studies Daniel Bodi: A New Proposal for the Origin of the Term for 'Letter': Sumerian inim.gar, i5-gar-ra; Akkadian egirtu; Aramaic ʾiggĕrâ, ʾiggartâ, Hebrew ʾiggeret − William R. Stewart: The Death of the Prophet? A Comparative Study of Prophetic Signs in the Royal Archives of Mari, Syria (ARM 26/1.206) and the Hebrew Bible (Jeremiah 19:1–13) − JiSeong James Kwon: Scribal Intertexts in the Book of Job: Foreign Counterparts of Job − Sungwoo Park/Johannes Unsok Ro: Collective Identity through Scribalism: Interpreting Plato's Menexenus and the Book of Chronicles Part II: Writing about Writing in the Hebrew Bible Benjamin Kilchör: »Then Moses Wrote This Torah” (Deut 31:9): The Relationship of Oral and Written Torah in Deuteronomy − Lisbeth S. Fried/Edward J. Mills III: Ezra the Scribe − Johanna Erzberger: Israel's Salvation and the Survival of Baruch the Scribe − Peter Altmann: Tracing Divine Law: Written Divine Law in Chronicles Part III: Case Studies Jin H. Han: Did the Deuteronomist Detest Dreams? − Benjamin D. Giffone: Regathering Too Many Stones? Scribal Constraints, Community Memory, and the 'Problem' of Elijah's Sacrifice for Deuteronomism in Kings − Woo Min Lee: The »Remnant” in the Deuteronomistic Cultural Memory: A Case Study on 2 Kings 19:30–31 − Roger S. Nam: Nehemiah 5:1–13 as Innerbiblical Interpretation of Pentateuchal Slavery Laws − Kristin Weingart: Chronography in the Book of Kings: An Inquiry into an Israelite Manifestation of an Ancient Near Eastern Genre − Benjamin Ziemer: Radical Versus Conservative? How Scribes Conventionally Used Books While Writing Books
ISBN:3161615255
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1628/978-3-16-161525-2