Commemorative Fictions: Athens (480 B.C.E.), Jerusalem (168 B.C.E.), and Alexandria (38 C.E.)

Updated by: 
Shlomo Brand
Research notes: 
SB/not checked/09/03/2022
Reference type: 
Journal Article
Author(s): 
Honigman, Sylvie
year: 
2021
Full title: 

Commemorative Fictions: Athens (480 B.C.E.), Jerusalem (168 B.C.E.), and Alexandria (38 C.E.)

Journal / Book Title || Series Title: 
Hebrew Bible and Ancient Israel
Volume: 
10
Issue / Series Volume: 
1
Abbreviated Series Name: 
HBAI
Publisher: 
Mohr Siebeck
Pages: 
77-96
Work type: 
Essay/Monograph
Abstract: 

This article examines the link between narratives transposing traumatic events into fictional story worlds and commemorative settings. The case-study of Athens serves to establish that wartime episodes could indeed be memorialized through fictional narratives and the reinterpretation of traditional myths, which were associated with such settings. Next, it is argued that alongside their recounting in texts referencing the events in a direct (mimetic) way, the inter-ethnic clashes in Alexandria (38 C.E.) and Antiochos IV's storming of Jerusalem (168 B.C.E.) spawned fictional narratives that reshaped the sources into stories of divine salvation in which massacres exist only as threats that are eventually averted, while the Judeans triumph over their enemies. As argued here, it is through this narrative transmogrification that the traumatic episodes were commemorated in festivals, which ostensibly celebrated victories. The texts discussed are Philo's In Flaccum, 3 Maccabees, 1 and 2 Maccabees, Masoretic Text Esther, and Judith, and as complements, the Acta Alexandrinorum and Chairemon's and Apion's Exodus Stories.

Notes: 
Transforming Memories of Collective Violence: Key Methods and Future Directions
Hebrew bible: 
Book: 
Esther
Primary Texts: Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha: 
Composition / Author: 
1 Maccabees
Composition / Author: 
2 Maccabees
Composition / Author: 
Judith
URL: 
https://www.mohrsiebeck.com/en/article/commemorative-fictions-athens-480-bce-jerusalem-168-bce-and-alexandria-38-ce-101628hebai-2021-0007?no_cache=1
Label: 
21/03/2022
Record number: 
109 585