01731nam a2200289 a 450000500170000000800200001702000150003704100100005208200130006208200130007510000190008810000150010710000110012224500150013324500410014824500180018924500130020726000100022026000190023026000090024930000110025830000140026930000090028352010080029265000480130085600930134820260119070455.02022-01-21 14:19:13 a0814650473 a0 eng a222.4306 bD249-J62 aJobling, David d(1941-...) eAuthor aBerit olam bStudies in Hebrew narrative & poetry cDavid Jobling p1 Samuel aU.S.A bThe Liturgical c1998 a330tr. bHardcover c23cm a1 Samuel is a national autobiography of the Hebrew people. David Jobling reads 1 Samuel as a story that is complete in itself, although it is part of a much larger narrative. He examines it as a historical document in a double sense: (1) as a document originating from ancient Israel and (2) as a telling of the past. Organizing the text through the three interlocking themes of class, race, and gender, Jobling asks how this historical - and canonical - story relates to a modern world in which these themes continue to be of crucial importance. While drawing on the resources of biblical narratology,` Jobling deviates from mainstream methodology. He adopts a `critical narratology` informed by such cultural practices as feminism and psychoanalysis. He follows a structuralist tradition which finds meaning more in the text's large-scale mythic patterns than in close reading of particular passages, and seeks methods specific to 1 Samuel rather than ones applicable to biblical narrative in general. anarration -- analyse -- `Bible AT Samuel I`4 uhttps://data.thuviencodoc.org/books/ImageCover/2022/1/21/_177829529_140.jpgyCover Image