The Elusive Covenant A Structural-Semiotic Reading of Genesis

The Elusive Covenant takes a fresh look at the book of Genesis, at the foundational text of the Hebrew bible. Uniting the studies of literary form, sign theory, and kinship structures, Terry J. Prewitt demonstrates the close relationship between the unfolding genealogies and the narrative structures...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Prewitt, Terry J. 1945- (-)
Formato: Libro electrónico
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Bloomington : Indiana University Press 1990
1990.
Colección:Advances in semiotics
Materias:
Ver en Biblioteca Universitat Ramon Llull:https://discovery.url.edu/permalink/34CSUC_URL/1im36ta/alma991009598325006719
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • I. Genealogies
  • Genealogical patterns in Genesis 1-11
  • Social patterns in Genesis 12-50
  • Birth, death, and rite of passage
  • Time and place
  • Structural implication of the Terahite system
  • The covenant of circumcision
  • The definition of Israel
  • II. Polity and history
  • Historicity
  • Mythscapes
  • Tribal ranking and monarchic succession
  • Birth order and maternal heritage
  • Names, blessings, rank, and social structure
  • Intersecting alliances of the Levites
  • Territory, kingship, and social structure
  • III. Structural hermeneutics
  • Rhetorical structures and cultural themes
  • Structural patterns in Genesis 1-14
  • Genesis 1 and 14
  • Genesis 2 and 13
  • Genesis 3 and 12
  • Adam and Abraham
  • Genesis 4 and 11
  • Genesis 5 and 10
  • Genesis 6 and 9
  • Genesis 7 and 8
  • Adam, Noah, and Abram
  • Toward a unified Genesis structure
  • Themal analysis
  • Holism and reductionism as hermeneutic principles
  • IV. Mythos and Ethos
  • Kinship, place, and story types
  • Matrimonial alliance in Biblical narrative
  • Withdrawn-woman narratives
  • Central marriage narratives
  • Redemption narratives
  • Mythos of patriarchal succession
  • Threats to lineage continuity
  • Violations of patriarchal authority
  • Validations of the lineage
  • Justice in the resolution of conflict V. Semiosis.