Linguistic Dating of Biblical Texts 在线电子书 图书标签:
发表于2024-11-27
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Ian Young is senior lecturer in the department of Hebrew, Biblical and Jewish Studies at the University of Sydney. He is the author of Diversity in Pre-Exilic Hebrew, FAT 5 (J. C. B. Mohr/Paul Siebeck, 1993) and the editor of Biblical Hebrew: Studies in Chronology and Typology, JSOTSup 369 (T & T Clark International, 2003).
Robert Rezetko is an independent scholar. He is the author of Source and Revision in the Narratives of David's Transfer of the Ark: Text, Language, and Story in 2 Samuel 6 and 1 Chronicles 13, 15-16, LHBOTS 470 (T & T Clark International, 2007) and co-editor with T. H. Lim and W. B. Aucker of Reflection and Refraction: Studies in Biblical Historiography in Honour of A. Graeme Auld, VTSup 113 (Brill, 2007). He is also a contributor to Ian Young's Biblical Hebrew: Studies in Chronology and Typology.
Martin Ehrensvärd lectures part-time in Semitic languages in the Department of Religion at the University of Aarhus. He is the co-author of a biblical Hebrew grammar in Danish, and he has published several articles on Hebrew syntax. He is also a contributor to Ian Young's Biblical Hebrew: Studies in Chronology and Typology.
Volume 1 is a textbook for students and is sold in a paperback edition as a single volume. Volume 2 provides material to supplement Volume 1 for advanced students and scholars and will be sold only as a set with Volume 1 in a hardback edition.
Since the beginning of critical scholarship biblical texts have been dated using linguistic evidence. In recent years this has become a controversial topic, especially with the publication of Ian Young (ed.), Biblical Hebrew: Studies in Chronology and Typology (2003). However, until now there has been no introduction and comprehensive study of the field.
Volume 1: An Introduction to Approaches and Problems by Ian Young, Robert Rezetko
Volume 1 introduces the field of linguistic dating of biblical texts, particularly to intermediate and advanced students of biblical Hebrew who have a reasonable background in the language, having completed at least an introductory course at the university or divinity school level, but also to scholars of the Hebrew Bible in general who have not been exposed to the full scope of issues. The book is useful to a wide range of readers by introducing topics at a basic level before entering into detailed discussion. Among the many issues discussed in this volume are: What is it that makes Archaic Biblical Hebrew ‘archaic’, Early Biblical Hebrew ‘early’, and Late Biblical Hebrew ‘late’? Does linguistic typology, i.e. different linguistic characteristics, convert easily and neatly into linguistic chronology, i.e. different historical origins? A large amount of text samples are presented for study. Readers are introduced to significant linguistic features of the texts by means of notes on the passages. For use as a textbook in a classroom context, the detailed notes on the text samples provide a background, concrete illustrations, and a point of departure for discussion of the general and theoretical issues discussed in each chapter.
After a brief introduction (Chapter 1), the following chapters look in detail at the principles and methodology used to differentiate Archaic, Early and Late Biblical Hebrew (Chapters 2-5, 12), the complicating matters of dialects and diglossia and textual criticism (Chapters 7, 13), and the significance of extra-biblical sources, including Amarna Canaanite, Ugaritic, Aramaic, Hebrew inscriptions of the monarchic period, Qumran and Mishnaic Hebrew, the Hebrew language of Ben Sira and Bar Kochba, and also Egyptian, Akkadian, Persian and Greek loanwords (Chapters 6, 8-12).
Volume 2: A Survey of Scholarship, a New Synthesis and a Comprehensive Bibliography by Ian Young, Robert Rezetko, Martin Ehrensvärd
Volume 2 begins with a book by book survey of scholarship on the origins (author, date, etc.) of biblical sources, passages and books with particular reference to the linguistic evidence scholars have cited in arriving at these conclusions (Chapter 1). This chapter is followed by an in depth synthesis of the topics discussed in Volume 1 in which the authors argue at once a new perspective on linguistic variety in biblical Hebrew (Chapter 2). Finally, the authors present a series of detailed case studies on various linguistic issues (Chapter 3), extensive tables of grammatical and lexical features (Chapter 4), and a comprehensive bibliography.
The authors argue that the scholarly use of language in dating biblical texts, and even the traditional standpoint on the chronological development of biblical Hebrew, are in need of thorough re-evaluation. Therefore in addition to over-viewing this field of research both volumes are also a critique of scholarly assumptions and conclusions and an argument for a new approach to linguistic variety in biblical Hebrew. Throughout the chapters in Volume 1 the authors present different points in their outline and in Volume 2 they synthesise the entire argument in a single chapter. The authors argue that ‘Early’ Biblical Hebrew and ‘Late’ Biblical Hebrew do not represent different chronological periods in the history of biblical Hebrew, but instead represent co-existing styles of literary Hebrew throughout the biblical period.
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Linguistic Dating of Biblical Texts 在线电子书 pdf 下载 txt下载 epub 下载 mobi 下载 2024