Seth L. Sanders connects the Bible's distinctive linguistic formwriting down a local spoken languageto a cultural desire to speak directly to people, summoning them to join a new community that the text itself helped call into being. Addressing the people of Israel through a vernacular literature, Hebrew texts reimagined their audience as a public. By comparing Biblical documents with related ancient texts in Hebrew, Ugaritic, and Babylonian, this book shows Hebrew's distinctiveness as a self-conscious political language. Illuminating the enduring stakes of Biblical writing, Sanders demonstrates how Hebrew assumed and promoted a source of power previously unknown in written literature: "the people" as the protagonist of religion and politics.
Seth L. Sanders connects the Bible's distinctive linguistic formwriting down a local spoken languageto a cultural desire to speak directly to people, summoning them to join a new community that the text itself helped call into being. Addressing the people of Israel through a vernacular literature, Hebrew texts reimagined their audience as a public. By comparing Biblical documents with related ancient texts in Hebrew, Ugaritic, and Babylonian, this book shows Hebrew's distinctiveness as a self-conscious political language. Illuminating the enduring stakes of Biblical writing, Sanders demonstrates how Hebrew assumed and promoted a source of power previously unknown in written literature: "the people" as the protagonist of religion and politics.

The Invention of Hebrew
280
The Invention of Hebrew
280Hardcover(1st Edition)
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9780252032844 |
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Publisher: | University of Illinois Press |
Publication date: | 11/17/2009 |
Series: | Traditions |
Edition description: | 1st Edition |
Pages: | 280 |
Product dimensions: | 6.10(w) x 9.10(h) x 1.00(d) |