In a book marked by unusually readable yet academic style, Mettinger transforms our knowledge of the story of Eden in Genesis. He shows us a story focused on a divine test of human obedience, with human disobedience and its consequences as its main theme. Both of the special trees in Eden had a function: the tree of knowledge as the test case, and the tree of life as the potential reward for obedience. Mettinger adopts a two-tiered approach. In a synchronic move, he understakes a literary analysis that yields striking observations on narratology, theme, and genre in the text studied. He defines the genre as myth and subjects the narrative to a functional analysis. He then applies a diachronic approach and presents a tradition-historical reconstruction of an Adamic myth in Ezekiel 28. The presence of both wisdom and immortality in this myth leads to a discussion of these divine prerogatives in Mesopotamian literature (remember Adapa and Gilgamesh). The two prerogatives demarcated an ontological boundary between the divine and human spheres. Nevertheless, the Eden Narrative does not evaluate the human desire to obtain knowledge or wisdom negatively. A piece of fresh, original scholarship in accessible form, this book is ideal for courses on creation, primeval history, the Bible and literature, and the Bible and the ancient Near East.
Les mer
PrefaceAcknowledgementsAbbreviationsChapter 1: Introduction1.1 The Agenda of the Present Study 1.2 One or Two Trees? A Survey of OpinionsChapter 2: A Narratological Analysis of the Eden Narrative2.1 Unifying Elements2.2 Time and Location2.3 Scenes and PlotSummary and Conclusions about the plot2.4 Characters2.5 Focalization (Point of View) and Voice2.6 Narrators and Characters: Omniscience and Restricted KnowledgeSummary and ConclusionsChapter 3: The Theme of the Eden Narrative3.1 “Theme” in Literary Theory3.2 The Theme of the Eden NarrativeSummary and Conclusions about the divine testChapter 4: The Genre and Function of the Eden Narrative4.1 The Genre of the Eden Narrative4.2 The Nature of Genre and How Genre Works4.3 The Eden Narrative versus the Chaos Battle Drama of CreationSummary and ConclusionsChapter 5: Traces of a Tradition: The Adamic Myth in Ezekiel 285.1 The Contents of the Adamic Myth5.2 Wisdom and Immortality in the Adamic Myth5.3 The Innovations of the Eden Poet (Genesis 2–3)Summary and ConclusionsChapter 6: Wisdom and Immortality in Adapa and Gilgamesh6.1 The Myth of Adapa and the South Wind6.2 The Gilgamesh EpicChapter 7: Synthesis7.1 The Two Main Traditions Alloyed7.2 The Conceptual Framework7.3 The Date and Literary IntegrityReferencesIndexes
Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781575061412
Publisert
2007-06-30
Utgiver
Vendor
Eisenbrauns
Vekt
499 gr
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Dybde
19 mm
Aldersnivå
UP, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
184