Constructions of Space III engages space both as focus in the texts under discussion, but also as analytical perspective. It explores more specifically how the Bible does not contain one, or even several, notions of sacred/holy space, even if there are undoubtedly many spaces described as such. It rather tries to trace how the discourses of space and those of the sacred intersect and interact in various writings of the Bible, more like points in a diagram, resulting in highly different ways of conceptualizing the sacred. A spatial-critical perspective can help us better understand how the…mehr
Constructions of Space III engages space both as focus in the texts under discussion, but also as analytical perspective. It explores more specifically how the Bible does not contain one, or even several, notions of sacred/holy space, even if there are undoubtedly many spaces described as such. It rather tries to trace how the discourses of space and those of the sacred intersect and interact in various writings of the Bible, more like points in a diagram, resulting in highly different ways of conceptualizing the sacred. A spatial-critical perspective can help us better understand how the relationship between notions of holiness and of space was a more dynamic one; as notions of space changed, so notions of holiness changed, and vice versa. Such a perspective also opens up further questions such as how the Temple's periphery is constructed, and how a human being can move and orient him- or herself in such a space over-loaded with meaning.
Jorunn Okland is Professor of Gender Studies in the Humanities, Centre for Gender Research, University of Oslo, Norway. J. Cornelis de Vos is lecturer in New Testament and Judaism at the University of Münster, Germany. He has published on land in the Bible and Early Judaism. Karen J. Wenell is Lecturer in New Testament and Theology at the University of Birmingham, UK.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction - the Editors Part I: Hebrew Bible Chapter 1: Holy Men in Space Stuart Lasine Wichita State University USA Chapter 2: Egypt as a Space of Fear and a Space of Hope Roland Boer University of Newcastle Australia Chapter 3: Mythical Space and Mythical Time: Jerusalem as the Site of the Last Judgement Klaus Bieberstein Otto-Friedrich-University Germany Chapter 4: The Threshing Floor as Sacred Space in the Hebrew Bible: A Spatial and Anthroplogical Perspective Tamara Prosaic Monash University Australia Chapter 5: Taking Issue with Thirdspace: Reading Soja Lefebvre and the Bible Chris Meredith University of Winchester UK Part II: New Testament and Intertestamental Literature Chapter 7: What Happened to Heaven when the Righteous Finally Arrived? Transformation Space and Redemption in 2 Baruch 51 Liv Ingeborg Lied MF Norwegian School of Theology Norway Chapter 8: Death Burial and Sacred Space in the Temple Scroll Nora David Institute for Jewish Studies at the University of Vienna Austria Chapter 9: The Kingdom of God as 'Space in Motion' Towards a More Architectural Approach Karen Wenell University of Birmingham UK Chapter 10: Lukan Narrative Spatiality in Transition: A Reading of Acts 11.19-12.25 for Its Spaces Matthew Sleeman Oak Hill Theological College UK Chapter 11: Hebrews 3.7-4.11 and the Function of Mental Time-Space Landscapes J. Cornelis de Vos University of Münster Germany Chapter 12: Carnelian and Caryatids: Sacred Space in the Apocalypse of John Jorunn Okland Centre for Gender Research at the University of Oslo Norway Part III: Outlook Chapter 13: The Space of Liturgical Being David Jasper University of Glasgow UK Index of References Index of Authors Index of Subjects
Introduction - the Editors Part I: Hebrew Bible Chapter 1: Holy Men in Space Stuart Lasine Wichita State University USA Chapter 2: Egypt as a Space of Fear and a Space of Hope Roland Boer University of Newcastle Australia Chapter 3: Mythical Space and Mythical Time: Jerusalem as the Site of the Last Judgement Klaus Bieberstein Otto-Friedrich-University Germany Chapter 4: The Threshing Floor as Sacred Space in the Hebrew Bible: A Spatial and Anthroplogical Perspective Tamara Prosaic Monash University Australia Chapter 5: Taking Issue with Thirdspace: Reading Soja Lefebvre and the Bible Chris Meredith University of Winchester UK Part II: New Testament and Intertestamental Literature Chapter 7: What Happened to Heaven when the Righteous Finally Arrived? Transformation Space and Redemption in 2 Baruch 51 Liv Ingeborg Lied MF Norwegian School of Theology Norway Chapter 8: Death Burial and Sacred Space in the Temple Scroll Nora David Institute for Jewish Studies at the University of Vienna Austria Chapter 9: The Kingdom of God as 'Space in Motion' Towards a More Architectural Approach Karen Wenell University of Birmingham UK Chapter 10: Lukan Narrative Spatiality in Transition: A Reading of Acts 11.19-12.25 for Its Spaces Matthew Sleeman Oak Hill Theological College UK Chapter 11: Hebrews 3.7-4.11 and the Function of Mental Time-Space Landscapes J. Cornelis de Vos University of Münster Germany Chapter 12: Carnelian and Caryatids: Sacred Space in the Apocalypse of John Jorunn Okland Centre for Gender Research at the University of Oslo Norway Part III: Outlook Chapter 13: The Space of Liturgical Being David Jasper University of Glasgow UK Index of References Index of Authors Index of Subjects
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