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From Babel to Babylon explores the literary and historical
character of biblical texts in the Torah, Prophecy, and Writings.
It considers questions of composition and the writing of history.
The book situates biblical texts in their immediate and distant
context. It reflects upon their intertextuality and identifies
their literary sources. Key events and figures are discussed in
light of the politics of the age. Gender issues are explored, with
attention to the different social roles of men and women and the
character of the interaction. Theology is another important topic,
and the character of God keeps changing to reflect the development
of historical and prophetic traditions. The books ends with
biblical wisdom, with the specific instruction to rely on the
experience of the sage, whose superior understanding is greater
than our own. This exhortation to listen to the text directs us
back to the introduction, where readers are asked to pay attention
to the principles the text sets up for its own interpretation.
This study argues that the gist and movement of the prophecy in the
book of Amos can be attributed to Amos himself, who composed a
coherent cycle of poetry. His dire predictions came after the Fall
of Samaria but before the Fall of Jerusalem. Writing a century
later, the author of the book preserved but updated Amos' text by
fitting it into a developing literary, historical and prophetic
tradition. Amos is used as a test case to show that prophecy
originated in the performing arts but was later transformed into
history and biography. The original prophecy is a song Amos recited
at symposia or festivals. The book's interest focusses on the
performer and his times.
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