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The Rhetorical Design of Isaiah 40-48/55: Zion's Incomparable Saviour and His Servants: Oudtestamentische Studiën, Old Testament Studies, cartea 82

Autor P. van der Lugt
en Limba Engleză Hardback – iun 2022
In this volume, Pieter van der Lugt offers a comprehensive analysis of the rhetorical structure of Isaiah. As in his previous studies on the Book of Job and the Psalter the author demonstrates that classical Hebrew poetry displays a well-defined structure consisting of balanced main parts (cantos) and subdivision into strophes. This rhetorical starting point is of crucial importance for the delimitation of the individual poems in Isaiah 40-48 and in many cases determines their interpretation. Subsequently, it is demonstrated that the successive compositions form well-defined and coherent cycles of poems.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9789004513976
ISBN-10: 9004513973
Pagini: 750
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Oudtestamentische Studiën, Old Testament Studies


Notă biografică

Pieter van der Lugt, Ph.D. (1980), Theological University of Kampen, the Netherlands. His publications deal with the rhetorical structure of classical Hebrew poetry and include Rhetorical Criticism and the Poetry of the Book of Job (OTS 32, Brill, 1995) and Cantos and Strophes in Biblical Hebrew Poetry I, II, and III (OTS 53/57/63, Brill, 2006/2010/2014).

Cuprins

Preface
Abbreviations

I Looking Back and Forward
1Delimitation of Poems in Isaiah 40–55: Various Methods, Coinciding Objectives
2Methodology

II Prologue: Isaiah 40,1–11
1Isaiah 40,1–8
2Isaiah 40,9–11

III The First Cycle: Isaiah 40,12–41,29
1Isaiah 40,12–26
2Isaiah 40,27–31
3Isaiah 41,1–7
4Isaiah 41,8–16
5Isaiah 41,17–20
6Isaiah 41,21–29

IV The Second Cycle: Isaiah 42,1–44,5
1Isaiah 42,1–12
2Isaiah 42,13–17
3Isaiah 42,18–25
4Isaiah 43,1–8
5Isaiah 43,9–15
6Isaiah 43,16–21
7Isaiah 43,22–28
8Isaiah 44,1–5

V The Third Cycle: Isaiah 44,6–45,25
1Isaiah 44,6–8
2Isaiah 44,9–20
3Isaiah 44,21–23
4Isaiah 44,24–45,8
5Isaiah 45,9–13
6Isaiah 45,14–25

VI The Fourth Cycle: Isaiah 46–48
1Isaiah 46,3–13
2Isaiah 47
3Isaiah 48,1–19
4Isaiah 46,1–2 and 48,20–21

VII Systematic Observations or an Introduction to the Design of Biblical Hebrew Poetry
1Canto Design of Isaiah 40–55 in Terms of Poetic Lines
2Word Repetitions at Strategic Positions
3Tricola and the Structure of Poems
4Transition Markers
5Numerical Perfection and Meaning
6Abrupt Switches at the End of a Poem

VIII The Rhetorical Design of Isaiah 40–55 in Terms of Cycles of Poems
1Previous Research
2Prologue: Isaiah 40,1–11
3Cycle I (40,12–41,29): Unmasking the Gods
4Cycle II (42,1–44,5): There is a Way Home
5Cycle III (44,6–45,25): Cyrus is the Agent
6Cycle IV (Isaiah 46–48): Babylon’s Ruin
7Cycle V (49,1–50,3): The Return to Zion
8Cycle VI (50,4–52,12): Summons to Awake
9Cycle VII: Trust in God (52,13–55,13)
10Overall Design Isaiah 40–55
11Special Bibliography

Appendix I: Poetic Design of Cycles VVII and Isaiah 35: A Provisional Survey
Appendix II: Shared Significant Vocabulary: An Outline
Glossary
General bibliography