Books : Biblical Text and Texture: A Literary Reading of Selected Texts

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Author name: Michael Fishbane

 : Biblical Text and Texture: A Literary Reading of Selected Texts
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Type of bind: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 220
EAN num: 9781851681518
ISBN number: 1851681515
Label: Oneworld Publications
Manufacturer: Oneworld Publications
Quantity: 1
Page Count: 168
Printing Date: March 25, 1998
Publishing house: Oneworld Publications
Sale Popularity Level: 801718
Studio: Oneworld Publications




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Product Description:
An exploration of key texts representing the use of three particular literary elements in the Hebrew Bible: narrative text; sermons; prayers and speeches.



Customer Reviews
User popularity level:  out of 5 stars

Rated by buyers 4 out of 5 stars - memory and hope
Because it stands in the shadow of Fishbane's monumental BIBLICAL INTERPRETATION IN ANCIENT ISRAEL, this little book is not so well known twenty-five years after its publication. That's a pity, for it exhibits the art of Fishbane's literarily sensitive readings of key biblical texts to a readership that will not labor through the massive methodological and typological argument of the larger work. If BIBLICAL INTERPRETATION is a four-movement symphony for full orchestra and a price tag to match, TEXT AND TEXTURE is a savory lunchtime string trio in the sun, offered gratis to passersby.

A short introduction claims that Scripture is the `rescued speech' of divine-human encounter, an artifact of that meeting that requires an interpreter to bring it to life. Fishbane steps in to fill that role in three sections, interpreting in order `Narratives and Narrative Cycles', `Speeches and Prayers', and `Motifs and Other Text-Transformations'.

Torah texts from Genesis and Exodus monopolize the section on narrative. In `Genesis 1:1-2:4a/The Creation' (pp. 3-16), Fishbane offers a winsome reading of the very first biblical creation account, read not only for its own texture but also against the phenomenon of multiple creation myths that was typical in the Ancient Near East and remains so today. Readers familiar with literary approaches to the Bible will find little content that is new here, but will delight in the balance and accessibility of Fishbane's reading. On the other hand, readers who come to this text from Sabbath School, Sunday School, or creationist controversy will appreciate - perhaps for the very first time - the cogency of a reading like Fishbane's, which seeks out the author's artistry and does not shrink from its theological burden. In this way, one of the Bible's most pregnant texts finds in Fishbane a capable midwife.

Though Jewish readers will not be surprised, Christians who follow Fishbane's reading of the primeval history (`Genesis 2:4b-11:32/The Primeval Cycle', pp. 17-39) may find striking his suggestion that the text portrays the serpent as a potentiality within human experience rather than as the supernatural adversary figure developed by Christian reflection upon this passage. This detail, typical of Fishbane's reading of the Bible's very first man as `everyman', exemplifies the interpretation the reader should expect as Fishbane moves from the `psychological' insight of Genesis ch. three to the outworking of the knowledge of evil in the sociality of ch. four. Fishbane is particularly attentive to human energy and restraint, the former serving both to construct and dismantle civilization.

The author's treatment of the Jacob cycle (`Genesis 25:19-35:22/The Jacob Cycle' discovers an intricate chiastic structure to the composite work, not unlike the symmetry in their literature that has been posited by Homeric scholars. Diverse genres have been artfully and coherently woven into a work in which `this narrative perspective-the ambilaterial givenness and hiddenness of divine grace-gives to the Jacob cycle its most fulsome power.'

Fishbane's brief treatment of the Exodus tradition (`Exodus 1-4/The Prologue to the Exodus Cycle', pp. 63-76) closes out his section on narrative cycles. Taking pains to credit the editorial work that wove separate traditions into a coherent whole, the author notices how the patriarchal narratives anticipate (though in compositional terms, depend upon) motifs and vocabulary given to us in the Exodus Cycle. As well, Moses' experience of reluctant calling typifies that later calling of at least three classical prophets.

`Deuteronomy 6:20-25/Teaching and Transmission' (ch. 5, pp. 79-83) introduces the book's somewhat shorter section entitled `Speeches and Prayers'. Fishbane observes that community continuity depends upon the sons' identification with and commitment to the experience and covenant of their fathers. Deuteronomy does not take this intergenerational dynamic for granted.

`Psalm 19/Creation, Torah, and Hope' (ch. 6, pp. 84-90) is a tersely elegant comment upon a three-part prayer, in which creation is praised, Torah is received, and hope is given in the very articulation of the anxious prayer's words. Fishbane's attention to nuance and double entendre is particularly helpful when he writes about prayer, prayers, and pray-ers.

Fishbane approaches one of Jeremiah's anguished prayers as 'a heightened expression of Jeremiah's inner history as a prophet of God, (without feeling) constrained to locate its precise setting in life ('Jeremiah 20:7-12/Loneliness and Anguish (ch. 7, pp. 91-102)'. The 'language of direct encounter ('You!') frames the prayer, 'bracketing and counterpointing the references to God as "Him" and "He," and the citations of the enemies plot against "him' (Jeremiah)'. This observation leads to a subtle exposure of the intratextual references that crisscross this text ... Read More



Rated by buyers 1 out of 5 stars - Poetic Interpretation & License
The student of literary invention will enjoy this "mini" interpretation of the Hebrew Bible. The author invokes a sense of "texture" from the text which is all for the good. Certainly many scholars of the text sense the hand of many authors and editors brushing a canvas, as it were, with poetic flights and imaginative constructions. The author almost surpasses the original editors with his efforts.

For example, early on the author tells us a portion of the text "...is a product of language in its creative vitality." Reference is later made to "...cosmogonic combat imagery..." which "...discloses a profound inner-biblical dialectic between the mythicization of history and historicization of myth." The author's creative vitality is piled upon that of the underlying text for all to see.

But what does it all mean? How do we really get at the "...deepest levels of literary and religious coherence..." in the text? Is the text really "...religious teaching, recording moments of meeting between God and man...?" Are there really such levels and coherence? Have this author's relections in fact "rescued speech" of the "meeting"?

As the original textual autographs are lost to history, the reader will wish to bear in mind that the author's broad and specific philological analysis and interpretation of literary types and cycles may add layers of texture without fully addressing problems of meaning and authenticity. One cannot be assured of the quality of any work, including this, when or if the author boasts the translations are his.

What we have is one more interpretation of the text most of which "come and go." As celebration and exposition of the traditional text with its "...self referential world of meaning..." people of faith will see the author's affirmations. This review cannot better conclude than with a quote from the author:

"For to the extent that biblical historical descriptions are rhetorically transposed by the infusion of paradigmatic mythic structures,the result of which is the very transvaluation of the events so described, it is equally significant that the biblical reuse of cosmogonic combat imagery does not simply serve to describe primordial events, but primarily underpins those whose locus is historical existence."

psb 6-20-2002



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