What is narrative criticism? / by Mark Allan Powell.
Series: Guides to biblical scholarship. New Testament series.Publication details: Minneapolis : Fortress Press, ©1990.Description: xi, 125 pages : illustrations ; 22 cmContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 0800604733
- 9780800604738
- Bible -- Criticism, Narrative
- Bible -- Critique de la forme
- Bible -- Critique, interprétation, etc
- Bible
- Bibel
- Bibel Neues Testament
- Bible -- Critique de la forme
- Literaire kritiek (bijbelwetenschap)
- Verteltheorie
- Nieuwe Testament
- Narrative Exegese
- Literarkritik
- Textkritik
- Bible Criticism, Narrative
- 220.6/6 20
- BS521.7 .P68 1990
- 11.46
- 11.31
- 11.33
- 11.45
- BC 6210
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books | Academic Resource Center at Levitt General Stacks (LOWER Level) | BS 521.7 .P68 1990 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 10427 |
Browsing Academic Resource Center at Levitt shelves, Shelving location: General Stacks (LOWER Level) Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
BS 511.3 .V65 2010 Captive to the word of God : engaging the Scriptures for contemporary theological reflection / | BS 518 .D8 B4713 1975 Holy Scripture / | BS 519 .M43 1987 Pseudonymity and canon : investigation into the relationship of authorship and authority in Jewish and earliest Christian tradition | BS 521.7 .P68 1990 What is narrative criticism? / | BS 521.8 .A53 2001 The control of biblical meaning : canon as semiotic mechanism / | BS 521.88 .B53 2003 Biblical studies alternatively : an introductory reader / | BS 530 .H44 What's so great about the Bible |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 123-125).
In this first nontechnical description of the principles and procedures of narrative criticism, the author distinguishes literary criticism from various modes of historical criticism - source, form, and redaction - and also delineates several types of literary criticism - structuralist, rhetorical, reader-response, and narrative. He then describes, analyzes, and illustrates the categories that narrative criticism employs, such as implied author and reader, narrator, character, events, settings. - Cover.
pt. 1: Scripture as story -- The Bible and literary criticism -- Literary criticism and historical criticism -- pt. 2: Ways of reading -- Structuralism -- Rhetorical criticism -- Reader-response criticism -- Narrative criticism -- pt. 3: Story and discourse -- Point of view -- Narration -- Symbolism and irony -- Narrative patterns -- pt. 4: Events -- A narrative understanding of events -- Case study: the plot of Matthew -- pt. 5: Characters -- A narrative understanding of characters -- Case study: The religious leaders in the synoptic Gospels -- pt. 6: Settings -- A narrative understanding of settings -- Case study: Settings in the Gospel of Mark -- pt. 7: Story as scripture -- The benefits of narrative criticism -- Objections to narrative criticism -- An expanded hermeneutic.
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