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About the Contributor(s): Joanna Dewey is Harvey H. Guthrie Jr.
Professor Emerita of Biblical Studies at the Episcopal Divinity
School in Cambridge, Massachusetts. She has written numerous
articles and is the author of Markan Public Debate (1980) and a
coauthor of Mark as Story (3rd ed., 2012).
In this third edition of Mark as Story, Rhoads, Dewey, and Michie
take their treatment of the Gospel of Mark to new levels. While
retaining their clear and thorough analysis of Mark as a narrative,
they now place their study of Mark in the context of orality. The
new preface explains the role of Mark in a predominantly oral
culture. Throughout the study, they refer to the author as
composer, the narrator as performer, the Gospel as oral
composition, and the audience as gathered communities. The
conclusion hypothesizes a performance scenario of Mark in Palestine
shortly after the Roman-Judean War of 66 to 70 CE. The new edition
also highlights the dimensions of Mark that stand in contrast to
imperial worldviews and values. The authors argue that the
performance of Mark itself was a means to draw audiences into a
non-imperial world based on mutual service rather than hierarchical
domination. In so doing, they shift the Gospels center of gravity
from the end of the story to the beginning, configuring it not as
"a passion narrative with an extended introduction" but as "the
arrival of the rule of God with an extended denouement." Performing
Mark: The appendices for students at the end of the book that offer
exercises to interpret the narrative of Mark now also include
"Exercises for Learning and Telling Episodes" from the Gospel of
Mark by heart as part of the learning process.
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