Liturgy and the First Person in Narratives of the Second Temple Period

Full title
Liturgy and the First Person in Narratives of the Second Temple Period
Research notes

Reader Checked|OA 29/04/2014||hw/not checked/23/12/2013

Reference type
Author(s)
Novick, Tzvi
Year
2012
Journal / Book Title || Series Title
Prooftexts
Volume
32
Issue / Series Volume
3
Pages
269-291
Work type
Label
23/12/2013
Abstract

Among the genres that make regular use of the first person in the Second Temple period, the testament and the apocalypse have received widespread attention. I isolate and analyze a different first-person narrative genre, the liturgical autobiography. In the liturgical autobiography, the speaker narrates an experience that he has undergone as a way of offering and attempting to elicit in his audience praise of God. I highlight the commonalities between the two best attested instances of the genre, the book of Tobit and Daniel 4, from their shifts in person to their use of Deuteronomy 32. Finally, I reflect on connections between the liturgical autobiography and novel elements in post-classical third-person narrative, especially the book of Ruth.