Available Formats
Heroines, Heroes and Deity: Three Narratives of the Biblical Heroic Tradition
By (Author) Dolores G. Kamrada
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
T.& T.Clark Ltd
7th February 2019
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Christianity
Criticism and exegesis of sacred texts
Old Testaments
221.6
Paperback
232
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
336g
Kamrada's study analyses three narratives concerning the greatest heroic figures of the biblical tradition: Jephthah's daughter, Samson and Saul, and includes a consideration of texts about King David. All three characters are portrayed as the greatest and most typical and exemplary heroes of the heroic era. All three heroes have an exceptionally close relationship with the deity all die a traditionally heroic, tragic death. Kamrada argues that within the Book of Judges and the biblical heroic tradition, Jephthah's daughter and Samson represent the pinnacle of female and male heroism respectively, and that they achieve super-human status by offering their lives to the deity, thus entering the sphere of holiness. Saul's trajectory, by contrast, exemplifies downfall of a great hero in his final, irreversible separation from God, and it also signals the decline of the heroic era. David, however, is shown as an astute hero who founds a lasting dynasty, thus conclusively bringing the heroic era in the Deuteronomistic history to a close.
With the help of comparative materials from the Bible, from the Ancient Near East, and from Greek and Roman Classics, [Kamrada] disentangles older heroic tales from the given biblical record. * The Expository Times *
Dolores G. Kamrada (PhD, University of Vienna) is lecturer at Pzmny Pter Catholic University, Budapest.