Authorizing an End: The Isaiah Apocalypse and Intertextuality

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BRILL, 2001 - 415 Seiten
Breaking with common views on Jewish proto-apocalyptic literature, in a postmodern manner, this work approaches one particular proto-apocalyptic text, Isaiah 24-27, the so-called "Isaiah Apocalypse," intertextually. This reading finds that the Isaiah Apocalypse redeploys and controls other texts, helping secure the authority of those texts as well as its own vision of the end. The first chapter surveys approaches to late Israelite prophecy and presents a new "intertextual" way of viewing this material. The chapters that follow investigate the "eternal covenant" and its role in intertextual space; Isaiah 25's construal of Israel's relationship to other nations; the central role of the "righteous" in Isaiah 26; and Isaiah 27, which points towards the victory of YHWH's order over chaos. Readers interested in the development of Jewish apocalyptic literature, the social arrangements of second-Temple Judaism, and postmodern treatments of biblical texts will find this volume useful.

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Inhalt

Framing the Question
1
ProtoApocalyptic as a FaceSaving Gesture When
8
History Literarure
24
Its Theoretical Use and Practical
32
The Isaiah
49
Isaiah 24
71
An Intertextual Approach
94
P and the Covenant Mosaic
117
Conclusion
204
Metaphor of Death
238
Conclusion
279
The Benefits of Order
291
Conclusion
319
Conclusion
356
Boundaries in YHWHs Society
362
Bibliography
369

Identifying Israel at the Feast
164
YHWHs Imperial Meal
179

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Autoren-Profil (2001)

Donald C. Polaski, Ph.D. from Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, is an independent scholar residing in Richmond, Virginia. He has published several articles treating texts from feminist and postmodern perspectives.

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