Contents
Contributors
Abbreviations
1. Introduction
Else K. Holt, Aarhus University, Denmark and Carolyn J. Sharp, Yale
Divinity School, USA
2. Duhm and Skinner’s Invention of Jeremiah,
Joe Henderson, Biola University, USA
3. Seduced by Method: History and Jeremiah 20
Mary Chilton Callaway, Fordham University, USA
4. Sunk in the Mud: Literary Correlation and Collaboration between
King and Prophet in the Book of Jeremiah
Barbara Green, Dominican School of Philosophy and Theology, USA
5. Bare Naked: A Gender Analysis of the Naked Body in Jeremiah
13
Amy Kalmanofsky, The Jewish Theological Seminary New York, USA
6. Figuration in Jeremiah’s Confessions: With Questions for
Isaiah’s Servant
Kathleen M. O’Connor, Columbia Theological Seminary, USA
7. Deathscape and Lament in Jeremiah and Lamentations
Mary E.Mills, Liverpool Hope University, USA
8. First-Person Figurations of Servant and Suffering in Isaiah and
Jeremiah: A Response to Mary Mills and Kathleen O’Connor
A. R. Pete Diamond (1950–2011) and Louis Stulman, University of
Findlay, USA
9. Art and Atrocity, and the Book of Jeremiah
Louis Stulman, University of Findlay, USA
10. Prophetic Sign Acts as Performances
Johanna Erzberger, Institut Catholique de Paris, France
11. Jeremiah the Lamenter: A Synoptic Reading
Else K. Holt, Aarhus University, Denmark
12. Indexes
This volume examines the construction of Jeremiah in the prophetic book and its afterlife up until the 20th Century.
Else K. Holt is Associate Professor of Old Testament
Studies in the Department of Culture and Society at Aarhus
University, Denmark. She has published several articles on the
theology of Jeremiah and its reception in both English and Danish.
She is the co-editor with Paul Kim and Andrew Mein of the upcoming
Concerning the Nations (November 2014).
Carolyn J. Sharp is Professor of Hebrew Scriptures at Yale
Divinity School, USA. Among her books are Prophecy and Ideology in
Jeremiah (2003) and Irony and Meaning in the Hebrew Bible (2009).
She is co-editor with Christl M. Maier of Prophecy and Power:
Jeremiah in Feminist and Postcolonial Perspective (2013).
This collection of essays on dream and vision reports is a welcome
addition to the relatively scarce scholarship focusing on the topic
... I am confident that the reader will find his/her own favourites
in this valuable volume.
*Journal of Theological Studies*
Ask a Question About this Product More... |