Isaiah is a composite book whose formation took place over a long period of time, incorporating the work of many different hands. Jacob Stromberg provides new analysis to show how the author of its last eleven chapters read and edited the earlier material, projecting the old work into a post-exile context.
Isaiah is a composite book whose formation took place over a long period of time, incorporating the work of many different hands. Jacob Stromberg provides new analysis to show how the author of its last eleven chapters read and edited the earlier material, projecting the old work into a post-exile context.
Jacob Stromberg has taught Hebrew and Old Testament at Oxford University and Duke Divinity School. He earned a M.A. in Hebrew and Semitics from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and a D. Phil from the University of Oxford. Currently he is working on an introduction to Isaiah.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction I: The Author of Third Isaiah 1: The Formation of Third Isaiah 2: The Composition of Isaiah 56.1-8 and 65-66 II: The author of Third Isaiah as Reader of the Book 3: Allusion and Influence in Isaiah 56.1-8 4: Allusion and Influence in Isaiah 65-66 III: The author of Third Isaiah as Redactor of the Book 5: Redaction in Isaiah 1-39 6: Redaction in Isaiah 40-55 7: Final Conclusions
Introduction I: The Author of Third Isaiah 1: The Formation of Third Isaiah 2: The Composition of Isaiah 56.1-8 and 65-66 II: The author of Third Isaiah as Reader of the Book 3: Allusion and Influence in Isaiah 56.1-8 4: Allusion and Influence in Isaiah 65-66 III: The author of Third Isaiah as Redactor of the Book 5: Redaction in Isaiah 1-39 6: Redaction in Isaiah 40-55 7: Final Conclusions
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