Rebuilding Identity
The Nehemiah-Memoir and its Earliest Readers
Format:Hardback
Publisher:De Gruyter
Published:24th Nov '04
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This monograph presents a fresh and detailed treatment of the problems posed by the Nehemiah-Memoir. Starting from the pre-critical interpretations of Ezra-Neh, the study demonstrates that the use of the first-person does not suffice as a criterion for distinguishing between the verba Neemiae and the additions of later authors. The earliest edition of the Memoir isconfined to a building report, which was expanded as early generations of readers developed the implications of Nehemiah's accomplishments for the consolidation and centralization of Judah. The expansions occasioned in turn the composition of the history of the "Restoration" in Ezra-Neh.
"Die Arbeit besticht durch gute Beobachtungen, eine klare Argumentation und ein uberzeugendes Gesamtbild, das zudem gewichtige Konsequenzen fur die fruhe 'Second Temple Period' hat."Uwe Becker in: ZAW 1/2006 "Wright's Rebuilding Identity promises a great deal and delivers even more. [...] Its scholarly sophistication is coupled with elegant formulation as Wright illustrates how the story of Nehemiah has grown into the drama of the court-Jew who discovers his own identity in a foreign land and then moves to redirect the identity and destiny of his people." Tamara Cohn Eskenazi in JBL 124/4 (2005)
ISBN: 9783110183191
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 669g
385 pages