Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 The Joseph and Moses narratives 4: narratives about the origins of Israel
- 2 Historical notes on Israel's conquest of Palestine: a peasants' rebellion
- 3 The background of the patriarchs: a reply to William Dever and Malcolm Clark
- 4 Conflict themes in the Jacob narratives
- 5 History and tradition: a response to J. B. Geyer
- 6 Text, context, and referent in Israelite historiography
- 7 Palestinian pastoralism and Israel's origins
- 8 The intellectual matrix of early biblical narrative: inclusive monotheism in Persian period Palestine
- 9 How Yahweh became God: Exodus 3 and 6 and the heart of the Pentateuch
- 10 4Q Testimonia and Bible composition: a Copenhagen Lego hypothesis
- 11 Why talk about the past? The Bible, epic and historiography
- 12 Historiography in the Pentateuch: twenty-five years after Historicity
- 13 The messiah epithet in the Hebrew Bible
- 14 Kingship and the wrath of God: or teaching humility
- 15 From the mouth of babes, strength: Psalm 8 and the Book of Isaiah
- 16 Job 29: biography or parable?
- 17 Mesha and questions of historicity
- 18 Imago dei: a problem in the discourse of the Pentateuch
- 19 Changing perspectives on the history of Palestine
- Index of biblical references
- Index of authors
12 - Historiography in the Pentateuch: twenty-five years after Historicity
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 The Joseph and Moses narratives 4: narratives about the origins of Israel
- 2 Historical notes on Israel's conquest of Palestine: a peasants' rebellion
- 3 The background of the patriarchs: a reply to William Dever and Malcolm Clark
- 4 Conflict themes in the Jacob narratives
- 5 History and tradition: a response to J. B. Geyer
- 6 Text, context, and referent in Israelite historiography
- 7 Palestinian pastoralism and Israel's origins
- 8 The intellectual matrix of early biblical narrative: inclusive monotheism in Persian period Palestine
- 9 How Yahweh became God: Exodus 3 and 6 and the heart of the Pentateuch
- 10 4Q Testimonia and Bible composition: a Copenhagen Lego hypothesis
- 11 Why talk about the past? The Bible, epic and historiography
- 12 Historiography in the Pentateuch: twenty-five years after Historicity
- 13 The messiah epithet in the Hebrew Bible
- 14 Kingship and the wrath of God: or teaching humility
- 15 From the mouth of babes, strength: Psalm 8 and the Book of Isaiah
- 16 Job 29: biography or parable?
- 17 Mesha and questions of historicity
- 18 Imago dei: a problem in the discourse of the Pentateuch
- 19 Changing perspectives on the history of Palestine
- Index of biblical references
- Index of authors
Summary
1999
It is hardly an exaggeration to claim that a modernist perception of history and history-writing as a distinct geme from narrative fiction has been the singularly most tenacious distortion in the past generations' scholarly reading of the Bible. In the recent Danish lexicon for biblical studies, Gads Bibel Leksikon, for example, Hans Jørgen Lundager Jensen's quite intelligent article on ‘historie’ recognized modern scholarship's intense self-identification with this concept. Accordingly, he found it necessary to concentrate his article entirely on distinguishing biblical narrative perceptions from a modern perception of history or of the Bible as useful for our historical reconstructions. With Lundager Jensen, I find myself much at odds with what seems implicit in the title of my essay. Given modern perceptions of historiography, one seems condemned to write about what the Bible is not. If, however, one chooses to write about biblical perceptions and what is implicit in the Bible's use of the past, and of time in its narration instead of history and history writing, one straggles against the very language one uses. One hardly escapes the anachronistic distortion one is so aware of. Is it possible that biblical writers simply did without a concept of history in their historiography, and didn't do anything in particular ‘instead of’? The Dantesque destiny that condemns historical-critical research to inescapable anachronism also cripples our efforts to discuss the ideology of narration implicit in biblical traditions.
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- Biblical Narrative and Palestine's HistoryChanging Perspectives, pp. 163 - 182Publisher: Acumen PublishingPrint publication year: 2013