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A Prophet Reads Scripture - Allusion in Isaiah 40-66 (Hardcover, First Edition,1)
Loot Price: R2,239
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A Prophet Reads Scripture - Allusion in Isaiah 40-66 (Hardcover, First Edition,1)
Series: Contraversions: Jews and Other Differences
Expected to ship within 18 - 22 working days
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This book examines the use of older biblical texts in Isaiah 40-66,
notably the writings attributed to Deutero-Isaiah. Its discussion
of allusions, influence, and intertextuality generates significant
questions for both biblicists and literary critics: Why do authors
allude? How does the presence of older material in a text affect
readers? How can critics identify genuine cases of allusion? Are
contemporary theories of intertextuality applicable to ancient
texts? The author defends the controversial historical questions
asked by scholars of inner-biblical exegesis, modifying some of the
dominant (and, in some ways, misleading) categories other biblical
scholars have created. In sum, the book aims to refine the study of
inner-biblical exegesis through an extensive examination of the use
of older texts in one corpus.
The redactional complexity of the Book of Isaiah has rendered it
central to discussions of canon formation and the final shaping of
biblical material. The author demonstrates that Deutero-Isaiah
situated himself in a wide stream of tradition by no means limited
to an Isaianic school, and that his most important literary
precursor was not First Isaiah but Jeremiah. This finding
necessitates a trenchant reappraisal of recent work on the unity of
the Book of Isaiah. Further, the author shows that the strikingly
consistent poetics of allusion running throughout all of Isaiah
40-66 testifies to the coherence of those chapters as a single
corpus, arguing against multiple authorship.
Close readings of the use of borrowed material in Isaiah 40-66
sharpen our appreciation of Deutero-Isaiah's originality and
artistry, highlighting his attempts to convince Judean exiles that
God had neither abandoned nor failed them. The prophet's heavy
dependence on earlier prophets illuminates the changes classical
Israelite prophecy underwent in the Babylonian exile. These changes
led to the disappearance of prophecy and the rise of exegetical
forms of religious expression known from Qumran, early
Christianity, and rabbinic Judaism.
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