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Index
WRITINGS AND SPEECH IN ISRAELITE AND ANCIENT NEAR EASTERN PROPHECY Contents List of Abbreviations Ehud Ben Zvi: Introduction: Writings, Speeches, and the Prophetic Books—Setting an Agenda
Social Realia, Literati, and Written Prophetic Texts Oral/Aural Communication Prophetic Literature and Social Formation The Symbiosis of Literacy and Orality Literary and Oral Prophets: An Additional Set of Issues and Questions
James L. Crenshaw: Transmitting Prophecy across Generations
An Inner Circle of Followers (“Disciples”) Oral or Written Transmission? Thematic Emphases
Robert C. Culley: Orality and Writtenness in the Prophetic Texts
Terminology General Observations Applications Implications
Philip R. Davies: “Pen of iron, point of diamond” (Jer 17:1): Prophecy as Writing
Prophecy as Literature What Do the Books Know of the Prophets? Oral Distinct from Written? Oracles in Writing From Scrap to Scroll Creating Prophets and Prophecy The Dangers of Monolithic Explanations Prophecy as Political and Social Critique Prophecy and World Order Summary
John Van Seters: Prophetic Orality in the Context of the Ancient Near East: A Response to Culley, Crenshaw, and Davies R. E. Clements: The Prophet as an Author: The Case of the Isaiah Memoir Michael H. Floyd: “Write the revelation!” (Hab 2:2): Re-imagining the Cultural History of Prophecy
The Oral-Written Distinction as an Ideological Concept The History of the Oral–Written Distinction
The Early Modern Phase The Late Modern Phase
Toward a Postmodern Concept of the Oral–Written Distinction Culturally Diverse Models of Prophetic Activity Culturally Diverse Models of Scribal Activity The Interrelationship of Prophetic and Scribal Activity
Donald B. Redford: Scribe and Speaker
The Interface between Written and Oral Tradition in Ancient Egypt The Problem of Literacy Public Readings The Antiquity and Authorship of Written Material Archives Oral Transmission and Tradition
The Scribal View Terms for Oral Delivery The Contents of Oral Transmission Narrative The Setting of Oral Delivery The Author Audience Reception The Modalities of Oral Delivery
Genre Manipulation Psychological Factors Craft Skill Style Speechifying
The Mechanics of Oral Composition and Transmission
Dicitur Mnemonics The Oral Formula Word Play Repetition and Multiforms Structure
The Judgment of the Scribe and “Inscripturation”
Karel van der Toorn: From the Oral to the Written: The Case of Old Babylonian Prophecy
Introduction The Place and Mode of Revelation The Transmission of the Message From the Oral to the Written Conclusion
Martti Nissinen: Spoken, Written, Quoted, and Invented: Orality and Writtenness in Ancient Near Eastern Prophecy
Sources for Ancient Near Eastern Prophecy Prophecy as a Process of Communication Oracular Reports Collections of Oracles Letters with Prophetic Quotations Literary Quotations of Prophetic Words Conclusion
Bibliography Index of Scripture Citations
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