A Biblical Text and Its Afterlives: The Survival of Jonah in Western CultureCambridge University Press, 2000 - 321 من الصفحات This book charts the mutations of the book of Jonah as it latches onto Christian and Jewish motifs and anxieties, passes through highbrow and lowbrow culture, and finally becomes something of a scavenger among the ruins, as, in its most resourceful move to date, it begins to live off the demise of faith. This book is concerned with those versions of the biblical that escape proper disciplinary boundaries: it shifts the focus from "Mainstream" to "Backwater" interpretation. It is less a navigation of interpretative history and more an interrogation of larger political/cultural issues: anti-Judaism in Biblical Studies, the secularization of the Bible, and the projection of the Bible as credulous ingenu, naive Other to our savvy post-Enlightenment selves. |
المحتوى
The Mainstream | 9 |
Jonah and Jesus as typological twins | 11 |
The evolution of a biblical character | 21 |
3 Divine disciplinary devices of the book of Jonah as a tractate on producing docile disciplebodies | 32 |
Jonah and the cani cacharis or a concluding scientific postscript | 42 |
survivals hauntings Jonah and Stanley fish and the Christian colonisation of the book of Jonah | 48 |
Backwaters and underbellies | 88 |
I Jewish interpretation | 97 |
3 On the strained relations between the backwaters and the mainstream or how Jewish and popular readings are prone to bring on a bout of scholarly ... | 176 |
on Jonahs infinite regurgitation and endless survival | 196 |
or the strange secular afterlives of biblical texts | 201 |
Regurgitating Jonah | 210 |
2 Regurgitating Jonah | 239 |
the book of Jonah as the quintessential story and the most typical of biblical texts | 280 |
293 | |
315 | |
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
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