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The theme of leadership played an important role in ancient Israel
and its discourse. It was explored time and again through memories
of proper, improper and in-between leaders and through memories of
particular institutions like monarchy, priesthood, and prophethood.
The ways in which this theme was shaped, reflected and explored
through social memory and how, in turn, those memories played a
socializing role within the community is the focus of this
collection of essays. Although the nature and limitations of
kingship, both native and foreign, is a central theme of many of
the essays, the volume includes discussions of both official and
unofficial local leadership within an empire setting, alternatives
to royal leadership like theocracy, charismatic judgeship, and
Greek-style tyrants, as well as considerations of Greek political
discourse on the best type of leadership.
Ancient Mesopotamian, biblical, rabbinic, and Christian literature
was created and transmitted by the intellectual elite and therefore
presents their world views and perspectives. This volume
investigates for the first time whether and to what extent
religious knowledge - e.g., "sacred" narratives, customary
practices, legal rules, family traditions, festival observances -
was accessible to and known by ordinary people beyond religious
functionaries. Which contexts (e.g., family, synagogue and church,
private and public study, communal rituals) enabled the
dissemination and acquisition of religious knowledge beyond
scholarly circles? In which forms other than written texts was such
knowledge available and who (e.g., parents, teachers, scribes,
rabbis, priests, monks) mediated it to a public that was largely
illiterate? Can we assume that the majority of those who identified
themselves as Jewish or Christian would have possessed a "working
knowledge" of the respective religious traditions and customary
practices? Would that knowledge have differed from one person to
another, depending on gender, socio-economic status, religious
commitment, and the general circumstances in which one lived? This
book is the first collaborative interdisciplinary study of this
important subject area with chapters written by international
experts on ancient Mesopotamia, the Hebrew Bible, Qumran
literature, rabbinic literature, and early Christianity including
apocrypha and monastic traditions.
This volume highlights and advances new developments in the study
of Edom and Idumea in eighteen essays written by researchers from
different disciplines (History, Archaeology, Assyriology,
Epigraphy, Memory Studies, and Hebrew Bible studies). The topics
examined include the emergence of Idumea, the evolution of
Edomite/Idumean identity, the impact of the Arabian trade on the
region, comparative and regional studies of Idumea and Judah,
studies of specific sites, artifacts, epigraphic and literary
sources, and a section on literary and ideological constructions
and memories of Edom reflected in the Hebrew Bible. This volume is
a go-to place for all who are interested in the current state of
research about these matters.
Social memory studies offer an under-utilised lens through which to
approach the texts of the Hebrew Bible. In this volume, the range
of associations and symbolic values evoked by twenty-one characters
representing ancestors and founders, kings, female characters, and
prophets are explored by a group of international scholars. The
presumed social settings when most of the books comprising the
TANAK had come into existence and were being read together as an
emerging authoritative corpus are the late Persian and early
Hellenistic periods. It is in this context then that we can
profitably explore the symbolic values and networks of meanings
that biblical figures encoded for the religious community of Israel
in these eras, drawing on our limited knowledge of issues and life
in Yehud and Judean diasporic communities in these periods. This is
the first period when scholars can plausibly try to understand the
mnemonic effects of these texts, which were understood to encode
the collective experience members of the community, providing them
with a common identity by offering a sense of shared past while
defining aspirations for the future. The introduction and the
concluding essay focus on theoretical and methodological issues
that arise from analysing the Hebrew Bible in the framework of
memory studies. The individual character studies, as a group,
provide a kaleidoscopic view of the potentialities of using a
social memory approach in Biblical Studies, with the essay on Cyrus
written by a classicist, in order to provide an enriching
perspective on how one biblical figure was construed in Greek
social memory, for comparative purposes.
The theme of leadership played an important role in ancient Israel
and its discourse. It was explored time and again through memories
of proper, improper and in-between leaders and through memories of
particular institutions like monarchy, priesthood, and prophethood.
The ways in which this theme was shaped, reflected and explored
through social memory and how, in turn, those memories played a
socializing role within the community is the focus of this
collection of essays. Although the nature and limitations of
kingship, both native and foreign, is a central theme of many of
the essays, the volume includes discussions of both official and
unofficial local leadership within an empire setting, alternatives
to royal leadership like theocracy, charismatic judgeship, and
Greek-style tyrants, as well as considerations of Greek political
discourse on the best type of leadership.
Ancient cities served as the actual, worldly landscape populated by
"material" sites of memory. Some of these sites were personal and
others were directly and intentionally involved in the shaping of a
collective social memory, such as palaces, temples, inscriptions,
walls, and gates. Many cities were also sites of social memory in a
very different way. Like Babylon, Nineveh, or Jerusalem, they
served as ciphers that activated and communicated various mnemonic
worlds as they integrated multiple images, remembered events, and
provided a variety of meanings in diverse ancient communities.
Memory and the City in Ancient Israel contributes to the study of
social memory in ancient Israel in the late Persian and early
Hellenistic periods by exploring "the city," both urban spaces and
urban centers. It opens with a study that compares basic
conceptualizing tendencies of cities in Mesopotamia with their
counterparts in ancient Israel. Its essays then explore memories of
gates, domestic spaces, threshing floors, palaces, city gardens and
parks, natural and "domesticated" water in urban settings,
cisterns, and wells. Finally, the studies turn to particular cities
of memory in ancient Israel: Jerusalem, Samaria, Shechem, Mizpah,
Tyre, Nineveh, and Babylon. The volume, which emerged from meetings
of the European Association of Biblical Studies, includes the work
of Stephanie Anthonioz, Yairah Amit, Ehud Ben Zvi, KAYre Berge,
Diana Edelman, Hadi Ghantous, Anne Katrine Gudme, Philippe
Guillaume, Russell Hobson, Steven W. Holloway, Francis Landy,
Daniel Pioske, Ulrike Sals, Carla Sulzbach, Karolien Vermeulen, and
Carey Walsh.
Ehud Ben Zvi is one of the foremost scholars in the field of Hebrew
Bible today. He has had a global impact both as a researcher and as
a teacher, and he continues to create cutting-edge research that is
helping to shape the future of the field. This volume marks his
upcoming retirement from the University of Alberta and honors him
and his career as a scholar and educator. Thirty-one papers written
by a select group of colleagues, including several former students
and a former teacher, are presented under three sub-headings:
History and Historiography; Prophecy and Prophetic Books; and
Methods, Observations, (Re)Readings. These categories represent the
wide-ranging interests of Ehud himself and include contributions on
the Bible as social memory, for which he has been a leading
advocate and theorist in the past decade. Contributors include R.
Albertz, Y. Amit, B. Becking, K. Berge, M. J. Boda, A.
Brenner-Idan, P. R. Davies, D. V. Edelman, M. H. Floyd, S.
Gilmayr-Bucher, L. L. Grabbe, P. Guillaume, L. Jonker, G. N.
Knoppers, S. Kostamo, F. Landy, T. Langille, C. Levin, J. R.
Linville, W. Morrow, C. Nihan, S. B. Noegel, J. Nogalski, R.
Müller, N. Na?aman, R. Nelson, F. Polak, K. Ristau, P. J. Sabo, C.
Walsh, and I. D. Wilson. Readers, regardless of their areas of
specialization, will find many stimulating and thought-provoking
contributions in the collection, which is fitting, given the
boundary-pushing work of the honoree.
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