The Image, the Depths and the Surface: Multivalent Approaches to Biblical Study
By (Author) Susan Gillingham
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Continuum International Publishing Group Ltd.
1st September 2002
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Middle Eastern history
Ancient history
Literary studies: ancient, classical and medieval
222.06
Hardback
160
390g
The purpose of this book is to illustrate that reading is a subjective process which results in multivalent interpretations. This is the case whether one looks at a text in its historical contexts (the diachronic approach) or its literary contexts (the synchronic approach). Three representative biblical texts are chosen: from the Law (Genesis 2-3), the Writings (Isaiah 23) and the Prophets (Amos 5), and each is read first by way of historical analysis and then by literary analysis. Each text provides a number of variant interpretations and raises the question, is any one interpretation superior What criteria do we use to measure this Or is there value in the complementary nature of many approaches and many results
Susan Gillingham is Fellow and Tutor in Theology, Worcester College, Oxford and University Lecturer in Old Testament at Oxford University.