Linguistic evidence for the pre-exilic date of the Yahwistic source
著者
書誌事項
Linguistic evidence for the pre-exilic date of the Yahwistic source
(Library of Hebrew Bible/Old Testament studies, 419)
T&T Clark International, c2005
- : hardback
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注記
Includes bibliographical references (p. [165]-176) and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
For the past few decades a growing number of scholars have attempted to overthrow the traditional Wellhausian view that the so-called 'Yahwist' or 'J' source of the Pentateuch is the oldest of the four major sources. These scholars have argued that J was composed during the exilic or post-exilic periods of ancient Israel. Their arguments have focused on the literary, historiographic, and theological characteristics of 'J'. This book attempts to re-evaluate on linguistic grounds such efforts to place the Yahwist source in the exilic or post-exilic periods. The study employs the methodology developed most prominently by Avi Hurvitz for identifying characteristic features of post-exilic Hebrew ('Late Biblical Hebrew'). This divides the language of the Hebrew Bible into three main chronological stages: Archaic Biblical Hebrew (ABH), Standard Biblical Hebrew (SBH), and Late Biblical Hebrew (LBH). Wright examines 40 features of J for which useful comparisons can be made to LBH and finds no evidence of LBH in the entire Yahwist source. Therefore it is unlikely that J was composed during the post-exilic period.
Moreover since Hurvitz has shown that the exilic period was a time of transition between SBH and LBH such that late features began to occur in exilic texts, the author concludes on linguistic grounds that J was most likely composed during the pre-exilic period of ancient Israel.
目次
- Introduction
- 1. Morphology
- 2. Syntax
- 3. Phraseology
- 4. Lexemes
- 5. Persian Loan-Words
- 6. Disputed J Source Verses
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