
Memory in a Time of Prose investigates a deceptively straightforward question: what did the biblical scribes know about times previous to their own? Daniel D. Pioske attempts to answer this question by studying the sources, limits, and conditions of knowing that would have shaped biblical stories told about a past that preceded the composition of these writings by a generation or more. This book is comprised of a series of case studies that compare biblical references to an early Iron Age world (ca. 1175-830 BCE) with a wide range of archaeological and historical evidence from the era in which these stories are set. Pioske examines the relationship between the past disclosed through these historical traces and the past represented within the biblical narrative. He discovers that the knowledge available to the biblical scribes about this period derived predominantly from memory and word of mouth, rather than from a corpus of older narrative documents. For those Hebrew scribes who first set down these stories in prose writing, the means for knowing a past and the significance attached to it were, in short, wed foremost to the faculty of remembrance. Memory in a Time of Prose reveals how the past was preserved, transformed, or forgotten in the ancient world of oral, living speech that informed biblical storytelling.
This book investigates the epistemological foundations of biblical scribalism by asking how ancient writers accessed and understood historical periods that predated their own compositions. Daniel D. Pioske, a scholar of the Hebrew Bible, utilizes a comparative framework to analyze the intersection of oral tradition and written prose. By contrasting biblical accounts of the early Iron Age with contemporary archaeological data, he argues that scribal knowledge was primarily mediated through collective memory and oral transmission rather than archival documentation.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars in the field of biblical studies recognize this work as a significant contribution to the understanding of ancient historiography and oral tradition. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which requires a foundational knowledge of historical-critical methods to fully appreciate the author's arguments.
Page Count:
297
Publication Date:
2018-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190649879
ISBN-13:
9780190649876
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