A New Era of Comparison in Biblical Studies: Case Studies in Applied Methodology provides a snapshot and assessment of the state of comparison in biblical studies and has significant implications for the future of the field. It is fitting that this book comes as an edited volume, because the future of academic comparison lies not with a single method but in a plurality of methods united by ethical concerns. The ten case studies in this volume represent a diverse set of approaches to comparative method as applied to a wide range of biblical and non-biblical materials-including Homer, the…mehr
A New Era of Comparison in Biblical Studies: Case Studies in Applied Methodology provides a snapshot and assessment of the state of comparison in biblical studies and has significant implications for the future of the field. It is fitting that this book comes as an edited volume, because the future of academic comparison lies not with a single method but in a plurality of methods united by ethical concerns. The ten case studies in this volume represent a diverse set of approaches to comparative method as applied to a wide range of biblical and non-biblical materials-including Homer, the Qur'an, Icelandic sagas, and #MeToo tweets-all united by a shared concern over how and why scholars compare. The result is a varied yet intricately woven assessment of where the field of comparative studies in biblical studies is at and a sampling of where it might go in future decades.
Amy L. Balogh is lecturer of religious studies at Regis University, Denver, Colorado, and editorial assistant at Gorgias Press. Jina Kang is assistant professor of Hebrew Bible/Old Testament and associate director of educational programming for the Trauma Healing Initiative at McCormick Theological Seminary, Chicago, Illinois. Hyun Chul Paul Kim is professor of Hebrew Bible in the Harold B. Williams chair of Biblical Studies at Methodist Theological School in Ohio (MTSO), Delaware, Ohio. Tammi J. Schneider holds the Danforth Chair of Religion at Claremont Graduate University, Claremont, California.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction Chapter 1: Why Comparative and Why Now: A Review from the Field, Amy L. Balogh and Tammi J. Schneider Chapter 2: "For Zion's sake I will not keep silent!": An Analysis of Isaiah 62 with Poetic Aurality and Tri-Polar Comparative Approaches, Johanna Rönnlund and Beth E. Elness-Hanson Chapter 3: A Comparative Approach to the Concept of Nakedness in the Garden of Eden Narratives of the Hebrew Bible and the Qur'an, Rebekah Call Chapter 4: When Prophets and Poets Clash in the Courts of Kings: A Comparative Analysis of the Elijah Narrative and the Old Norse Egil's Saga , Tod R. Harris Chapter 5: Comparing Referential and Discursive Dimensions of Texts, Edwin K. Broadhead Chapter 6: Reimagining Grief: A Comparative Analysis of Grief and Its Social Function in Paul and Epictetus, Melissa J. Barciela Mandala Chapter 7: How to Do Things with Prophecy: J. L. Austin's How to Do Things with Words and the Book of Jonah, Kelsey Spinnato Chapter 8: Wait, Did Paul Know Homer? A Reflection on Reflecting on Paul's Reflections, Dan Clanton Jr. Chapter 9: A Method in the Study of Literary Motifs: How Folkloric Studies Can Inform Comparative Methodologies, Alison K. Hawanchak Chapter 10: Does My Story Count?: The Bible and #MeToo, Leah Cech Chapter 11: Exploring the State and Future of Comparison in Biblical Studies: A Response, Drew S. Holland
Introduction Chapter 1: Why Comparative and Why Now: A Review from the Field, Amy L. Balogh and Tammi J. Schneider Chapter 2: "For Zion's sake I will not keep silent!": An Analysis of Isaiah 62 with Poetic Aurality and Tri-Polar Comparative Approaches, Johanna Rönnlund and Beth E. Elness-Hanson Chapter 3: A Comparative Approach to the Concept of Nakedness in the Garden of Eden Narratives of the Hebrew Bible and the Qur'an, Rebekah Call Chapter 4: When Prophets and Poets Clash in the Courts of Kings: A Comparative Analysis of the Elijah Narrative and the Old Norse Egil's Saga , Tod R. Harris Chapter 5: Comparing Referential and Discursive Dimensions of Texts, Edwin K. Broadhead Chapter 6: Reimagining Grief: A Comparative Analysis of Grief and Its Social Function in Paul and Epictetus, Melissa J. Barciela Mandala Chapter 7: How to Do Things with Prophecy: J. L. Austin's How to Do Things with Words and the Book of Jonah, Kelsey Spinnato Chapter 8: Wait, Did Paul Know Homer? A Reflection on Reflecting on Paul's Reflections, Dan Clanton Jr. Chapter 9: A Method in the Study of Literary Motifs: How Folkloric Studies Can Inform Comparative Methodologies, Alison K. Hawanchak Chapter 10: Does My Story Count?: The Bible and #MeToo, Leah Cech Chapter 11: Exploring the State and Future of Comparison in Biblical Studies: A Response, Drew S. Holland
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