Biblical Narrative as Ethics?: The Limits of Exemplarity in Ancient Jewish Literature

Full title
Biblical Narrative as Ethics?: The Limits of Exemplarity in Ancient Jewish Literature
Updated By
Research notes

SB/not checked/02/12/2021

Reference type
Author(s)
Lambert, David
Year
2021
Journal / Book Title || Series Title
Dead Sea Discoveries
Volume
28
Issue / Series Volume
3
Abbreviated Series Name
DSD
Publisher
Brill
Place of Publication
Leiden
Pages
396–422
Work type
Label
20/12/2021
Abstract

This paper considers whether biblical narrative was used as part of a technology of the self in Jewish antiquity. Many have seen the assumption that Israel’s ancestors were perfect and, hence, worthy of imitation as essential to the Bible’s identity as Scripture around the turn of the Common Era. Recently several scholars have detailed the specific dynamics of exemplarity among certain readers of the Bible, such as Philo, particularly in light of Hellenistic and Roman models. Such work draws attention to the relative lack of explicit attestation for such a practice in much of ancient Jewish literature. As a next step, we need to further delineate what constitutes a literary practice of exemplarity and explore alternatives or additions to it, such as memorialization. To do so, this paper examines a range of texts, including the Genesis Apocryphon, the Book of Jubilees, Ben Sira, Philo, Josephus, and the rabbinic collection, Genesis Rabbah.

Primary Texts: Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha
Composition / Author
Composition / Author
Primary Texts: Judean Desert Documents
Scroll / Document