Biblical Form Criticism in Its Context

by
Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 1998-12-01
Publisher(s): Sheffield Academic Pr
List Price: $241.50

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Summary

This magnum opus is not another catalogue of the forms of biblical literature, but a deeply reflected account of the significance of form itself. Buss writes out of his experience in Western philosophy and the intricate involvement of biblical criticism in philosophical history. Equally, biblical criticism and the development of notions of form are related to social contexts, whether from the side of the aristocracy (tending towards generality) or of the bourgeois (tending towards particularity) or of an inclusive society (favouring a relational view). Form criticism, in Buss's conception, is no mere formal exercise, but the observation of interrelationships among thoughts and moods, linguistic regularities and the experiences and activities of life. This work, with its many examples from both Testaments, will be fundamental for Old and New Testament scholars alike.

Table of Contents

Preface 9(2)
Acknowledgments 11(1)
Abbreviations 12(3)
Introduction: Recognizing Forms
15(6)
The Notion of Speech Forms
15(2)
Subconscious and Reflective Awareness of Forms
17(1)
Reflexive Awareness
18(3)
Biblical Patterns
21(10)
Implicit Philosophy of Reality and Speech
22(5)
Implicit Recognition of Forms of Speech
27(4)
Graeco-Roman Theories of Form
31(17)
Philosophy
31(6)
Theories of Types of Speech Acts
37(1)
The Study of Literature, Including Especially Poetry
37(4)
Rhetoric
41(2)
Types of Style
43(5)
Early and Mediaeval Analyses
48(44)
Early Biblical Interpretation
48(20)
Mediaeval and Renaissance Jewish Interpretation (c. 900-1600 CE)
68(11)
Literary Patterns in Mediaeval Christian Exegesis
79(13)
Postmediaeval Examinations of Form
92(29)
Catholic and Protestant Interpretations, 1500-1575
93(8)
Reconstruction in Poetics and Rhetoric, c. 1500-1775
101(12)
Form in Professional Biblical Exegesis, 1575-1775
113(5)
The Old and the New in Hermeneutics
118(3)
Formal Analysis during The Reign of Historiography (c. 1775-1875)
121(35)
The Triumph of Historicism
121(21)
Analysis of Biblical Literature: General Treatments
142(7)
Treatments of Individual Kinds or Bodies of Literature
149(7)
`Form' After 1875 Outside Biblical Studies
156(11)
Jewish Analyses of Form, c. 1875-1965
167(8)
Roman Catholic Views of Literary Form, c. 1875-1965
175(12)
The Bible as Literature: Protestant Analyses Largely by or for Nonspecialists, c. 1875-1965
187(22)
Arnold
187(2)
Moulton
189(4)
Briggs
193(2)
Harper
195(3)
Others
198(6)
General Reflections on the Bible as Literature Movement
204(5)
General in His Context
209(54)
The Intellectual and Social Framework
209(17)
The Form-Critical Programme
226(29)
Evaluation
255(8)
Form in Protestant New Testament Scholarship, c. 1875-1965
263(61)
A Movement towards Form near the Turn of the Century (before 1915)
263(15)
The Situation after World War I
278(8)
Gunkel's New Testament Students
286(22)
Other Protestant New Testament Studies, c. 1915-1965
308(16)
Form in Specialist Protestant Studies of the Hebrew Bible, c. 1915-1965
324(83)
The Social and Intellectual Situation
324(33)
Major Paths in Form Criticism: Form-History, History of Form, Form Analysis and theory of Form
357(50)
Concluding Reflections
407(14)
Acknowledgment and Transcendence of Past Biblical Scholarship
407(6)
Relational Form Criticism: Future Possibilities
413(8)
Bibliography 421(68)
Index of References 489(2)
Index of Authors 491

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