E-Book, Englisch, Band Band 019, 312 Seiten
Perrin The Dynamics of Dream-Vision Revelation in the Aramaic Dead Sea Scrolls
1. Auflage 2015
ISBN: 978-3-647-55094-7
Verlag: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 0 - No protection
E-Book, Englisch, Band Band 019, 312 Seiten
Reihe: Journal of Ancient Judaism. Supplements (JAJ.S)
ISBN: 978-3-647-55094-7
Verlag: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 0 - No protection
Andrew B. Perrin is Assistant Professor of Religious Studies and Co-Director of the Dead Sea Scrolls Institute at Trinity Western University in Langley, British Columbia, Canada
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
- Geisteswissenschaften Jüdische Studien Geschichte des Judentums Geschichte des Judentums: Biblische & Klassische Periode
- Geisteswissenschaften Geschichtswissenschaft Alte Geschichte & Archäologie Biblische Geschichte & Archäologie
- Geisteswissenschaften Jüdische Studien Jüdische Studien Heilige & Traditionstexte: Torah, Talmud, Mischna, Halacha
Weitere Infos & Material
1;Cover;1
2;Title Page;4
3;Copyright;5
4;Table of Contents;8
5;Body;14
6;List of Tables;13
7;Abbreviations;14
7.1;Books, Series, and Journals;14
7.2;Sigla Used in Dead Sea Scrolls Transcriptions and Citations;15
7.3;Abbreviations for Frequently Cited Aramaic Compositions and Manuscripts;15
8;Acknowledgments;18
9;Foreword;20
10;Chapter One: Mapping the World of the Aramaic Dead Sea Scrolls;24
10.1;Introduction;24
10.2;A Corpus or Collection? Dream-Visions and the (Dis)Unity of the Aramaic Texts;31
10.3;The Direction of This Study;38
11;Part One: Shared Compositional Patterns;40
11.1;Chapter Two: A Prospectus of Aramaic Dreams and Dreamers;42
11.1.1;Introduction;42
11.1.2;Compositions Featuring Dream-Visions;43
11.1.2.1;1 Enoch;43
11.1.2.1.1;Book of Watchers (1 Enoch 1–36);44
11.1.2.1.2;Astronomical Enoch (1 Enoch 72–82);45
11.1.2.1.3;Book of Dreams (1 Enoch 83–91);47
11.1.2.1.4;Epistle of Enoch (1 Enoch 92–105);48
11.1.2.1.5;Birth of Noah (1 Enoch 106–107);48
11.1.2.2;Book of Giants;49
11.1.2.3;Words of Michael;52
11.1.2.4;Genesis Apocryphon;53
11.1.2.5;Testament of Jacob;58
11.1.2.6;New Jerusalem;59
11.1.2.7;Aramaic Levi Document;62
11.1.2.8;Apocryphon of Levi;66
11.1.2.9;Visions of Amram;68
11.1.2.10;Daniel 2–7;71
11.1.2.11;Aramaic Apocalypse;73
11.1.2.12;Four Kingdoms;74
11.1.3;Fragmentary Texts Exhibiting Dream-Vision Features;75
11.1.3.1;Prayer of Nabonidus;75
11.1.3.2;4QVision.;77
11.1.3.3;4QpapVision.;77
11.1.3.4;4QVision. ;78
11.1.3.5;4QpapApocalypse;79
11.1.4;Excursus: Dreaming in Aramaic before and beyond the Dead Sea Scrolls;79
11.1.5;Texts Mistakenly Associated with Dream-Vision Revelation;83
11.1.5.1;Tobit;83
11.1.5.2;4QPseudo Daniel.-.;84
11.1.5.3;4QExorcism;85
11.1.5.4;Jews in the Persian Court;86
11.1.5.5;4QVision.?;87
11.1.6;Summary of Findings;87
11.1.6.1;Table 1: The Dream-Visions of the Aramaic Dead Sea Scrolls at a Glance I: Prominent Literary Themes, Images, and Motifs;89
11.2;Chapter Three: Writing Dream-Visions in Aramaic: Common Forms, Structures, Idioms, and Phrases;92
11.2.1;Introduction;92
11.2.2;Overlapping Terminology for Dreams and Visions;93
11.2.2.1;Table 2: Etymological Survey of Dream Terms in Some Languages of the Ancient Near East;95
11.2.3;Formulae Introducing Dream-Visions;97
11.2.3.1;Table 3: A Cross-Section of Dream-Vision Introductory and Concluding Formulae;98
11.2.4;Phrases and Idioms Marking Narrative Movement;103
11.2.5;Oneirocritical Terminology and Methods;107
11.2.6;Awakening Formulae and Responses Elicited by Dream-Visions;111
11.2.7;Summary of Findings;115
11.2.7.1;Table 4: The Dream-Visions of the Aramaic Dead Sea Scrolls at a Glance II: Prominent Formal and Philological Features (continued on next page);119
12;Part Two: Shared Applications of Dream-Visions;122
12.1;Chapter Four: The Exegetical Underpinnings of Some Pre-Diluvian and Patriarchal Dreamers;124
12.1.1;Introduction;124
12.1.2;An Enochic Example: Philological Flexibility in Gen 5:22 and 24 and the Root of 1 Enoch’s Expansive Revelatory Tradition;126
12.1.3;Uncovering Scripture’s Intimations of Dream-Visions in Genesis Apocryphon;129
12.1.3.1;A Threefold Combination of Verbs Alluding to Revelation in Gen 9:21 and 24: “to reveal (...),” “to awake (...),” and “to know (...)”;130
12.1.3.2;Informing Abram of the Plan behind the Sister-Wife Ruse in Gen 12:11;134
12.1.3.3;From Theophany to Dream-Vision: Harmonizing Gen 12:7, 13:14, and 15:1;136
12.1.3.4;An Underlying Interest in Casting the Patriarchs as Prophetic Dreamers: Are Noah and Abram also among the Prophets?;140
12.1.4;Excursus: Curiosities of Composition and Exegesis in Mordecai’s Dream-Vision in Greek Esther Addition A;145
12.1.5;Levi’s Visionary Installment as a Priest in Aramaic Levi Document;150
12.1.5.1;The Suggestiveness of Mal 2:5–6: Levi “descended (...)” after “walking with (... ...)” God;153
12.1.5.2;A Complementary Clue in 1 Sam 2:27: The Lord “revealed (...)” Himself to Levi;155
12.1.6;Summary of Findings;157
12.2;Chapter Five: Dreaming of the Temple and Priesthood in This World, the Otherworld, and the World to Come;159
12.2.1;Introduction;159
12.2.2;An Enochic Example: Revealing the Calendar of the Heavens and Endorsing its Earthly Application in Astronomical Enoch;161
12.2.3;Visions of Amram on the Genetics of the Priesthood;163
12.2.3.1;Grafting Amram and Aaron into (Aramaic) Levi’s Priestly Family Tree;163
12.2.3.2;Table 5: Priestly Terminology for Levitical and Aaronide Priesthoods in Aramaic Levi Document and Visions of Amram;166
12.2.3.3;An Otherworldly Endorsement from the Celestial Melchizedek;167
12.2.4;Interpreting the Cult: Displaying Sacerdotal Halakhah in New Jerusalem;172
12.2.5;Excursus: Temple Authorization Dream-Visions from the Ancient Near East, Egypt, Hebrew Scriptures, and Graeco-Roman Antiquity;179
12.2.6;Additional Glimpses of Priestly Dreams and Dreamers;184
12.2.6.1;Testament of Jacob: A Partial View of Priestly Precincts, Praxis, and Promises;184
12.2.6.2;Apocryphon of Levi: Envisioning an Eschatological Priest-Saviour;186
12.2.7;Summary of Findings;189
12.3;Chapter Six: (P)Reviewing the Course and Configuration of History through Dream-Vision Revelation;191
12.3.1;Introduction;191
12.3.2;An Enochic Example: The Scope and Structure of Human History in the “Apocalypse of Weeks”;194
12.3.3;The Flood in Historical Retrospect and Prospect;198
12.3.3.1;Urzeit und Endzeit as a Historiographical Principle in Book of Giants;198
12.3.3.2;The Deluge, Lay of the Land, and Eschatology in Noah’s Dream-Vision in Genesis Apocryphon;202
12.3.4;The Eras of Empires: Four Kingdom Chronologies from the Exile to the Eschaton;211
12.3.4.1;Daniel 2 and 7: The God of Israel’s Direction of Pagan Dominions;211
12.3.4.2;World History Redux: Retrofitting Rome into the Scheme in Four Kingdoms;213
12.3.4.3;Table 6: Proposed Referents for the Historical Scheme of Four Kingdoms;215
12.3.5;Other Views of Geopolitical Upheaval or Succession;219
12.3.5.1;The Culmination of Israelite History in New Jerusalem;219
12.3.5.2;Another Monarch Learns His Place in World History in Aramaic Apocalypse;222
12.3.6;Summary of Findings;226
12.4;Chapter Seven: Overview and Outcomes;228
12.4.1;Toward a Description of the Aramaic Dead Sea Scrolls as a Constellation of Texts;228
12.4.2;An Enlivened Encounter with the Scriptural Past: Pseudepigraphy, Epistemology, and Dream-Vision Discourses;234
12.4.3;The Quest for the Ancient Jewish Apocalypse: Four Prescriptions from the Aramaic Texts;239
12.4.3.1;Table 7: Lists of Apocalypses and Apocalyptically Oriented Texts among the Aramaic Dead Sea Scrolls (continued on next page);241
12.4.4;Closing Thoughts;247
13;Bibliography;249
14;Ancient Sources Index;285
15;Author Index;308




