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This volume makes a positive intervention into
maximalist/minimalist debates about Israelite historiography by
pointing to the events that happened during the Persian and
Hellenistic periods. During this historical epoch, traditions about
Israel and Judah's founding became fixed as markers of ethnic
identity, and much of the canonical Hebrew Bible came into its
present form. Concentrating on these events, a clearer historical
picture emerges.
The entire volume is set within the context of Doug Knight's
contributions, which have encouraged a rigorous social-scientific
and tradition-historical approach to the Hebrew Bible and ancient
Israel in general. Many scholars have pursued how the social
scientific method, first used to analyze early monarchic Israel,
can shape the understanding of these later historical periods.
Knight's methods, teachings, writings, and scholarly interventions
have pointed the contributors of this volume to fresh
considerations of the Persian and Hellenistic periods. The
concluding essay will examine the future directions in which such
sociological and historical investigation can go forward.
The Constructions of Ancient Space Seminar ran as a joint project
of the AAR and SBL from 2000-2005, the only cross-society venture
of its time. For the first time in the development of biblical
studies, participants in the seminar attempted to foreground and
critically analyze space with the same theoretical nuance that
biblical scholars have traditionally devoted to history. This
volume, first, collects five papers focused on biblical cities, and
especially Jerusalem. The female personification of Zion allows
for, among other things, a specifically feminist slant on
spatiality theory. Whereas these essays begin with cities as
material realities, the second part of the volume offers two essays
that begin with the imagined spaces of apocalyptic literature,
though these two are shown to have deep connection to actual lived
space. The final essay moves outside the biblical canon to examine
real and imagined space in Pure Land Buddhism.
This new series presents innovative titles pertaining to human
origins, evolution, and behavior from a multi-disciplinary
perspective. Subject areas include but are not limited to
biological and physical anthropology, prehistoric archaeology,
evolutionary psychology, behavioral ecology, and evolutionary
biology. The series volumes will be of interest primarily to
students and scholars in these fields.
Human bodily existence is at the core of the Torah and the rest
of the Hebrew Scriptures -- from birth to death. From God's
creation of Adam out of clay, to the narratives of priests and
kings whose regulations governed bodily practices, the Hebrew Bible
focuses on the human body. Moreover, ancient Israel's understanding
of the human body has greatly influenced both Judaism and
Christianity. Despite this pervasive influence, ancient Israel's
view of the human body has rarely been studied and, until now, has
been poorly understood.
In this beautifully written book, Jon L. Berquist guides the
reader through the Hebrew Bible, examining ancient Israel's ideas
of the body, the unstable roles of gender, the deployment of
sexuality, and the cultural practices of the time. Conducting his
analysis with reference to contemporary theories of the body,
power, and social control, Berquist offers not only a description
and clarification of ancient Israelite views of the body, but also
an analysis of how these views belong to the complex logic of
ancient social meanings. When this logic is understood, the
familiar Bible becomes strange and opens itself to a wide range of
new interpretations.
Tangled in the puzzling images of the book of Ezekiel is a message
that is very relevant to our lives today. This insightful study
explores the scripture in terms of its themes.
This study offers up rich new understandings of the eucharist by
juxtaposing Old Testament traditions of faith with themes of
communion in the early church.
Looking at their stories in the context of their times, Berquist
casts new light on how and why these women in a man's world acted
as they did and what they still have to teach us.
This volume makes a positive intervention into
maximalist/minimalist debates about Israelite historiography by
pointing to the events that happened during the Persian and
Hellenistic periods. During this historical epoch, traditions about
Israel and Judah's founding became fixed as markers of ethnic
identity, and much of the canonical Hebrew Bible came into its
present form. Concentrating on these events, a clearer historical
picture emerges. The entire volume is set within the context of
Douglas A. Knight's contributions, which have encouraged a rigorous
social-scientific and tradition-historical approach to the Hebrew
Bible and ancient Israel in general.
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