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This book is a study of the making of collective memory within
early Judaism in a seminal text of the Western canon. The book of
Ecclesiastes and its speaker Qohelet are famous for saying that
there is 'nothing new under the sun'. In the literary tradition of
the modern West this has been taken as the motto of a book that is
universal in scope, Greek in its patterns of thought, and floating
free from the particularism and historical concerns of the rest of
the Bible. Jennie Barbour argues that reading the book as a general
compendium in this way causes the reader to miss a strong
undercurrent in the text.
'Nothing new under the sun' is, in fact, a historical deduction
made by Qohelet on the basis of long-range observation, conducted
through his study of his nation's traditions: the first sage to
turn from the window to the Book is not Ben Sira, but Qohelet
himself. While Ecclesiastes says nothing about the great founding
events of Israel's story, it is haunted by the decline and fall of
the nation and the Babylonian exile, as the trauma of the loss of
the kingdom of Solomon persists through a spectrum of intertextual
relationships. The view of Qohelet from the throne in Jerusalem
takes in the whole sweep of Israel's remembered historical
experiences; Ecclesiastes is revealed as not simply as a piece of
marketplace philosophy, but as a learned essay in processing a
community's memory, with strong ties to the rest of Jewish and
Christian scripture.
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