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No biblical historian is included in the standard dictionaries of
historians. Banks study examines the boundaries as well as the
links that exists between history writing in biblical studies and
the practice of history in university departments of history. She
argues that while the influence of the profession of writing
history is apparent, there are countervailing forces as well. The
presupposition that the Bible is a book of history conditions the
outcome of historical research in biblical studies. Banks argues
that Julius Wellhausens history of Israel set in motion the general
tendency toward ever greater congruence between historiography in
biblical studies and in academic departments of history; that the
initial tension caused by Wellhausens work produced a reaction
which effectively stalled the movement toward accommodation between
secular, academic history and biblical studies; and that a new
generation of scholars applying the methods used by secular
historians has revived and continued the tendency to promote the
practice of secular, academic historiography in biblical studies.
Banks applies her method to Wellhausen, Martin Noth, John Bright,
and Thomas Thompson.
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