This book explores the references to Egypt in the Pentateuch twice as dense as in the rest of the Hebrew Bible in the context of the production of the text's final form during the Persian period. Here, as Greifenhagen shows, Egypt functions ideologically as the primary "other" over against which Israel's identity is constructed, while its role in Israel's formation appears as subsidiary and as a superseded stage in a master narrative which locates Israel's ethnic roots in Mesopotamia. But the presentation of this powerful neighbour is equivocal: a dominant anti-Egyptian stance coexists with alternative, though subordinate, pro-Egyptian views, suggesting that the Pentateuchal narrative was produced within a context of ideological conflict over attitudes towards a land that provided a home for Jewish fugitives and emigrants.
Product Details
EGYPT ON THE PENTATEUCHS IDEOL
Format: Hardcover
Pages: 348
Product Weight: 1.42 lbs
Author: Greifenhagen, Franz V.
Editor: Mein, Andrew
Editor: Camp, Claudia V.
Publication Date: 2003-04-01
Language: English
Series: Library of Hebrew Bible/Old Testament Studies
Publisher: SHEFFIELD ACADEMIC PR
Dewey Decimal Classification: 222.106
Number of Units in Package: 1
ISBN: 9780826462114