Historical and Literary Approaches
For both students and scholars, many consider this book the best contemporary introduction to the Pentateuch.
This book synthesizes prior scholarship to show how both the P and non-Priestly strata of Genesis also emerged out of a complex interaction by Judean scribes with non-biblical literary traditions, particularly with Mesopotamian textual ...
13–14 , as we have already shown ( see Introduction , “ Genesis 14 , " p . ... 6 ; Deut 7 ) ; see Van Seters , Abraham in History , 269 ; Anbar , “ Genesis 15 , " 54–55 ; Carr , Reading the Fractures of Genesis , 165.
Instead of surveying the Bible book-by-book beginning with Genesis, this work introduces readers to the major works of the Bible by timeframe.
In addition to this , the composition of the complex Genesis to Kings has been defined more accurately in terms of the ... À propos d'un livre récent ( = D.M. CARR , Reading the Fractures ( 1996 ) ] , in ETR 73 ( 1998 ) 231-238 .
These are listed by carr, Reading the Fractures of Genesis, 45; ska, Introduction to Reading the Pentateuch, 146; nihan, From Priestly Torah to Pentateuch, 21 n. 3. The lack of an introduction for Moses is important within Blum's ...
Eisenbrauns, 1986), 80; D.A.Dorsey, The Literary Structure ofthe Old Testament: A Commentary on GenesisMalachi (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1999), 60; B. K. Waltke,Genesis: A Commentary ... 60 Carr, Reading the Fractures of Genesis, 285.
56 57 David M. Carr, Reading the Fractures of Genesis, 162-163. See also Jacques Vermeylen, "La 'table des nations' (Gen 10): Yaphet figure-t-il l'Empire perse?," Transeu 5 (1992): 113-132, esp. 113-119.
D. M. Carr, Reading the Fractures of Genesis: Historical and Literary Approaches (Louisville, KY, 1996). I wish to thank David Carr for reading an earlier version of this paper and offering a number of corrections and comments onhis ...
Persistence of Evil, 66–68; Bernhard W. Anderson, From Creation to New Creation (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1994), 54; David M. Carr, Reading the Fractures of Genesis (Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox Press, 1996), 74–75. 8.