Joe Henderson offers a critique of the assumption that poetic form in
the book of Jeremiah indicates authenticity. This assumption
undergirds Bernhard Duhm's reconstructions (1901) of the prophet's
biography and the book's composition, the basic components of the
dominant paradigm for twentieth-century Jeremiah scholarship.
Henderson argues that Duhm's model is best understood as an attempt to
bring the book into conformity with nineteenth-century systems of
aesthetics, historiography, and theology-and with the Grafian
reconstruction of the history of Israel's religion. The accord between
these systems and Duhm's assumption about poetic form has less to do
with their common grasp of the historical reality of Hebrew prophecy
than with their common roots in the Romantic theory of prophetic and
poetic inspiration-a theory forged by Robert Lowth in his exposition
(1752) of the poetry he found in the prophetic books.
Henderson contends that continued adherence to Duhm's foundational
assumption has held back recent attempts to “move beyond Duhm” and
overcome the fragmentation of the book entailed by his model.
Rhetorical critics, who maintain that Jeremiah 2–10 is unified by
the structural devices of the historical prophet, and redaction
critics, who maintain that Jeremiah 11–20 is unified by the
theological agenda of Deuteronomistic editors, both rely on the
assumed authenticity of the poetry. Henderson observes that although
these scholars have uncovered evidence of dramatic presentation in
Jeremiah 2–20, they have failed to see that the dramatic nature of
these chapters undermines their use for Duhm's historical-critical
projects and reveals what actually unifies them-narrative progression.
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A Critique of the Use of Poetic Form as a Criterion of Authenticity
Product details
ISBN
9780567676443
Published
2020
Edition
1. edition
Publisher
Bloomsbury UK
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Author