Etched in Stone: The Emergence of the Decalogue
Autor David H. Aaronen Limba Engleză Paperback – 30 apr 2006
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780567029713
ISBN-10: 0567029719
Pagini: 368
Dimensiuni: 150 x 226 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția T&T Clark
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0567029719
Pagini: 368
Dimensiuni: 150 x 226 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția T&T Clark
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Caracteristici
Offers deep background information for the current debate about the use of the Ten Commandments in the public square.
Recenzii
"well-structured...Aaron's in-depth intertextual investigation into the origins of the Decalogue is...suited to scholars."
"By his own admission, his method of investigation is hybrid, including literary criticism, cultural criticism, historical criticism, and prominent among them all, ideological criticism. In his approach he engages "counterhistories," versions that were not accorded orthodox status, believing that they reveal much about the process of tradition development. Though meticulous in its approach, the book is quite readable. The serious Bible student will find it very challenging." - Dianne Bergant, The Bible Today, May /June 2007
"The work itself is a solid, academic study of the date and authorship of the versions of the Decalogue found in the Hebrew Bible....The book was an enjoyable, and informative read. The style is pleasant, detailed, academically responsible, but never patronizing or overwhelming. Given the innovations offered, and the methodological limitations the author set himself in the study, the book is worth reading."- T.R. Hobbs, Journal of Hebrew Scriptures, Vol. 7 2007
"Etched in Stone traces the literary evolution of the Decalogue and shows that the use of the tablets as symbols for Israel's covenant with God is a late literary adaptation of earlier attempts to write so impressive a scene. Through painstaking textual analysis, Aaron leads the reader through dozens of sources, each of which sheds light upon the emergence of the Decalogue as the Pentateuch's most dramatic and emblematic narrative scene." - David H. Aaron is Professor of Bible & History of Interpretation, Hebrew Union College - Jewish Institute of Religion, Cincinnati
"This study articulates a clear and carefully constructed critical methodology and then brilliantly applies it to a central problem in biblical studies, the origin of the Decalogue. While one may not accept all of its arguments and revolutionary conclusions, the serious Pentateuchal scholar will be challenged to rethink his/her previously held views in a very stimulating way."--John Van Seters, professor emeritus, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Popularly venerated as a modern 'creed of ethics', an 'image of moral stability', the Decalogue emerges from Aaron's book as a postexilic literary creation. Far from an simple iconoclastic exercise, David Aaron has produced a sophisticated model of historical analysis that also owes a great deal to literary theory, and that methodically moves through a range of issues, carefully building the case for a specific date and meaning+in the course of which he illuminates nearly every corner of Pentateuchal research. Philip R. Davies, University of Sheffield, England
"By his own admission, his method of investigation is hybrid, including literary criticism, cultural criticism, historical criticism, and prominent among them all, ideological criticism. In his approach he engages "counterhistories," versions that were not accorded orthodox status, believing that they reveal much about the process of tradition development. Though meticulous in its approach, the book is quite readable. The serious Bible student will find it very challenging." - Dianne Bergant, The Bible Today, May /June 2007
"The work itself is a solid, academic study of the date and authorship of the versions of the Decalogue found in the Hebrew Bible....The book was an enjoyable, and informative read. The style is pleasant, detailed, academically responsible, but never patronizing or overwhelming. Given the innovations offered, and the methodological limitations the author set himself in the study, the book is worth reading."- T.R. Hobbs, Journal of Hebrew Scriptures, Vol. 7 2007
"Etched in Stone traces the literary evolution of the Decalogue and shows that the use of the tablets as symbols for Israel's covenant with God is a late literary adaptation of earlier attempts to write so impressive a scene. Through painstaking textual analysis, Aaron leads the reader through dozens of sources, each of which sheds light upon the emergence of the Decalogue as the Pentateuch's most dramatic and emblematic narrative scene." - David H. Aaron is Professor of Bible & History of Interpretation, Hebrew Union College - Jewish Institute of Religion, Cincinnati
"This study articulates a clear and carefully constructed critical methodology and then brilliantly applies it to a central problem in biblical studies, the origin of the Decalogue. While one may not accept all of its arguments and revolutionary conclusions, the serious Pentateuchal scholar will be challenged to rethink his/her previously held views in a very stimulating way."--John Van Seters, professor emeritus, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Popularly venerated as a modern 'creed of ethics', an 'image of moral stability', the Decalogue emerges from Aaron's book as a postexilic literary creation. Far from an simple iconoclastic exercise, David Aaron has produced a sophisticated model of historical analysis that also owes a great deal to literary theory, and that methodically moves through a range of issues, carefully building the case for a specific date and meaning+in the course of which he illuminates nearly every corner of Pentateuchal research. Philip R. Davies, University of Sheffield, England
Descriere
An approach to the questions of when and why the Decalogue texts were written as well as a comprehensive approach to methodological issues that contribute to our understanding of the composition of the Decalogue.