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Media type:
Book;
Commemorative Publication
Title:
Performing the Gospel
:
orality, memory, and Mark; essays dedicated to Werner Kelber
Contains:
The implications of orality for studies of the biblical text
/ Holly E. Hearon
Theimplications of orality for studies of the biblical text /Holly E. Hearon --Gender and otherness in rabbinic oral culture: on Gentiles, undisciplined Jews, and their women /Martin S. Jaffee --Many voices, one script: the prophecies of George Khambule /Jonathan A. Draper --Form as a mnemonic device: cultural texts and cultural memory /Jan Assmann --Memory in oral tradition /John Miles Foley --Tradition in the mouth of the hero: Jesus as an interpreter of Scripture /Ellen Bradshaw Aitken --Jesus and the canon : the early Jesus traditions in the context of the origins of the New Testament canon /Jens Schröter --Interfaces of orality and literacy in the Gospel of Mark /Vernon K. Robbins --Memory, technology, and the composition of Mark /Whitney Shiner --Aprophet like Moses and Elijah: popular memory and cultural patterns in Mark /Richard A. Horsley.
Gender and otherness in rabbinic oral culture: on Gentiles, undisciplined Jews, and their women
/ Martin S. Jaffee
Many voices, one script: the prophecies of George Khambule
/ Jonathan A. Draper
Form as a mnemonic device: cultural texts and cultural memory
/ Jan Assmann
Memory in oral tradition
/ John Miles Foley
Tradition in the mouth of the hero: Jesus as an interpreter of Scripture
/ Ellen Bradshaw Aitken
Jesus and the canon : the early Jesus traditions in the context of the origins of the New Testament canon
/ Jens Schröter
Interfaces of orality and literacy in the Gospel of Mark
/ Vernon K. Robbins
Memory, technology, and the composition of Mark
/ Whitney Shiner
A prophet like Moses and Elijah: popular memory and cultural patterns in Mark
/ Richard A. Horsley.
Footnote:
Includes bibliographical references. - Festschrift Werner Kelber
Description:
This ground-breaking volume gathers the best new work in Gospel's criticism centered on how the Gospels actually came to be: through oral tradition, story performance, and cultural memory. The contributors include: John Miles Foley, Martin Jaffee, Jonathan A. Draper, Ellen Aitken, Holly Hearon, Vernon K. Robbins, Whitney Shiner, Jan Assmann, Jens Schroeter, and Richard A. Horsley.