Shaping Text Through Song: The Influence of Singing Upon Processes of Textual Interpretation and Variation in the Dead Sea Scrolls
Updated By
Research notes
AC/12/02/2026/not checked
Reference type
Year
2026
Journal / Book Title || Series Title
Studies on the Texts of the Desert of Judah
Volume
156
Abbreviated Series Name
STDJ
Publisher
Brill
Place of Publication
Leiden-Boston
Work type
Language
Label
13/04/2026
Orion Center Library has physical copy
✖
Hebrew bible
Book
Psalm
Chapter(s)
86
Book
Jeremiah
Chapter(s)
20
Verse(s)
13
Book
Psalm
Chapter(s)
106
Verse(s)
2
Book
Psalm
Chapter(s)
33
Book
Psalm
Chapter(s)
67
Verse(s)
7-8
Book
Psalm
Chapter(s)
92
Verse(s)
5
Abstract
This book explores the influential role played by singing as a performative medium within processes of textual interpretation and variation during the late Second Temple Period, as reflected in the Dead Sea Scrolls. Singing is argued to be a prominent and widespread mode of performance, and a medium which exerted considerable influence within and upon processes of textual composition, interpretation and transmission. These complex processes result in the variation of textual forms, meaning that sung performance contributed to the widespread pluriformity of textual traditions, including those that were eventually codified in the scriptural canons of Judaism and Christianity.
Primary Texts: Judean Desert Documents
