Day in Mamre, Night in Sodom: Abraham and Lot in Genesis 18 and 19BRILL, 1995 - 296 pages Recent developments in Pentateuchal studies - from both diachronic (historical) and synchronic (literary-textual) perspectives - have made it possible to read Genesis 18 and 19, the evocative story of Abraham and Lot, in a new light. This work uses both types of approach to examine the text, (1) considered in its own terms - its structural and linguistic features, in a detailed close reading of each verse - and (2) considered in terms of its symbolism and imagery in relation to those found in comparable cultures of the ancient Middle East. The end product is an integrated reading of the Abraham and Lot story as a sustained literary unit, and the reading process demonstrates the value of a range of exegetical methods - structuralist, linguistic, literary, historical and anthropological - in the continuing exploration of this well-known biblical narrative. |
Table des matières
Chapter One Introduction | 1 |
B Methodological Approaches to the Study | 10 |
Genesis 1819 as the Subject of Diachronic | 19 |
Methodological Intentions | 26 |
The Deep Structure of Genesis 1819 | 48 |
Models of Structuration | 63 |
Chapter Three The Language of Genesis 18 and 19 | 71 |
28238 | 171 |
48 | 200 |
63 | 215 |
107 | 228 |
137 | 235 |
170 | 244 |
Map | 255 |
275 | |
292 | |
Autres éditions - Tout afficher
Expressions et termes fréquents
Abimelech Abraham Abraham and Lot action Alten Testament ancient annunciation approach archetypal Bible Biblical birth blessing Canaanite cataclysm cave clause concept context criticism depicted destruction Deut dialogue divine Documentary Hypothesis elements emphasized epic episode etiological fairy fairy tale father folktale Genesis Gibeah God's gods guests Gunkel Hebrew hospitality human Ibid images implications incest Isaac Israel Jacob Kerenyi language Legend literary literature Lord Lot's daughters Lot's wife Mamre meaning messengers moral motif movement myth mythology narrative narrator nature notion Old Testament origins parallel Patriarchal pattern Pentateuch poetic promise provides punishment question recurrent reference relationship Rendsburg rescue righteous role Sarah saving scene sense sexual situation Sodom and Gomorrah Sodomites story structure symbol tale tension thematic theme Theology theophany tion tradition Ugaritic unity verb verse visitors Westermann words Yahwist YHWH YHWH's Zoar