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The King and the Land: A Geography of Royal Power in the Biblical World

Autor Stephen C. Russell
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 8 dec 2016
In The King and the Land, Stephen C. Russell offers a history of space and power in the biblical world by demonstrating how the monarchies in ancient Israel and Judah asserted their power over strategically important spaces such as privately-held lands, religious buildings, collectively-governed towns, and urban water systems. Case studies in the book treat Solomon's use of foreign architecture (1 Kings 5-8), David's dedication of land to Yahweh (2 Samuel 24), Jehu's decommissioning of Baal's temple (2 Kings 10), Absalom's navigation of the collective politics of Levantine towns (2 Samuel 15), and Hezekiah's reshaping of the tunnels that supplied Jerusalem with water (2 Kings 20; 2 Chronicles 32). Steeped in archaeological and textual evidence, this book contextualizes Israelite and Judahite royal and tribal politics within broader patterns of ancient Near Eastern spatial power. By providing a historical investigation into the nature of power and physical space in the Iron Age Levant, this book also offers fresh literary readings of the biblical texts that anchor its theses.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780199361885
ISBN-10: 0199361886
Pagini: 302
Dimensiuni: 236 x 160 x 33 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States

Recenzii

This volume is packed with many fruitful insights and intriguing interpretations that make this work a must read for anyone interested in the dynamics of power in ancient Israel and in text-critical issues in the Hebrew Bible.
Readers who are looking for a well-researched, critical study of royal power and space in the biblical world would benefit from reading this book. It is very readable for a general audience, and the extensive notes and bibliography, which make up more than half of the book, are useful to a scholarly audience.
The gains of the book...are considerable for those who read with sufficient patience. They will read more knowingly about royal power in the Bible. And beyond the scope of the book itself, the tension between centralized economic-political leverage and a community-based social realty is immediately pertinent to our interpretive situation in the United States. The book will help us read more knowingly the Bible as an arena in which social power is intensely contested and our own circumstance of public power that faces acute crisis.

Notă biografică

Stephen C. Russell is Assistant Professor of Ancient History at John Jay College, CUNY.