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Titre : | The End of Mark's Story : A Methodological Study |
Auteurs : | Paul L. Danove, Auteur |
Type de document : | texte imprimé |
Editeur : | Leiden [Pays-Bas] : Brill, 1993 |
Collection : | Biblical Interpretation Series, num. 3 |
ISBN/ISSN/EAN : | 978-90-04-09717-9 |
Format : | x + 293 p. |
Langues: | Anglais |
Index. décimale : | CA/E (Introduction à l'évangile de Marc) |
Résumé : |
This volume generates a narrative grammar which unites linguistic, structuralistic, rhetoric, and reader-responsive methods and then uses it to investigate the textual indicators for interpreting the ending of the Gospel of Mark.
The first part of this book generates the narrative grammar in response to significant contemporary writings on methods of narrative analysis. The second part provides a detailed analysis of the Gospel’s larger narrative units. This analysis isolates narrative units according to a consistent set of criteria, it bases the interpretation on a limited number of qualifications of the implied reader, indicating the centrality of the literary and rhetorical traditions of the Hebrew Bible for interpretation, clarifying the model of irony used in the narrative, and accounting for the negative presentation of the disciples on narrative grounds. |
Note de contenu : |
- Introduction to the Analysis PART ONE - Generation of the Method of Analysis - 1. Definitions and Premises Employed in the Proposal: 1.1. Aristotle’s Discussion of Plot / 1.2. Discussions of Plot by Representative Contemporary Authors / 1.3. Essential Definitions and Premises Concerning Plot - 2. Generation of a Structuralist Method of Plot Analysis: 2.1. Toward a Method of Plot Analysis (Tzvetan Todorov; Kieran Egan) / 2.2. Construction Grammar: The Analogue for Plot Analysis / 2.3. Generation of Construction Grammar Analogue for Plot Analysis / 2.4. Application of the Plot Analogue to Mk 6:14-29 / 2.5. The Generation of Multivalent Meaning - 3. A Method for Analyzing Narrative Communication: 3.1. A Model of Narrative Communication / 3.2. A Model of the Implied Reader / 3.3. The Limits of Interpretation Posed by the Implied Reader - 4. Unification of the Structuralist and Phenomenological Approaches: 4.1. The Theoretical Basis for Unification: Frames / 4.2. Analytical Concepts and Procedures Employing Frames / 4.3. An Example: The “Passion Narrative” Frame / 4.4. Conclusion PART TWO - Application of the Method to the Gospel of Mark - 5. Determination of the Extent of the Gospel of Mark: 5.1. External Evidence Concerning the Endings / 5.2. Considerations Based upon Vocabulary and Style / 5.3. Considerations Based upon Grammar / 5.4. Considerations Based upon Narrative Techniques / 5.5. Conclusions - 6. Analysis of the Plot of the Gospel of Mark - 7. The Implied Reader of the Gospel of Mark: 7.1.Literary Competence of the Authorial and Narrative Audiences / 7.2. Encyclopedic Knowledge of Authorial and Narrative Audiences / 7.3. System of Beliefs of the Authorial and Narrative Audiences / 7.4. Fictional Elements in the Story World: Mk 10: 17-31 / 7.5. Conclusion - 8. The Textually Grounded Interpretation of the Gospel Narrative: 8.1. The Textually Grounded, Readerly Guided Response at 16:8 / 8.2. The Model of Discipleship / 8.3. The Failure of the Story and the Success of the Plot / 8.4. The Textually Grounded Interpretation of the Ending / 8.5. The Rhetorical Function of the Narrative: A “Tender Trap” / 8.6. The Irony of the Gospel Narrative / 8.7. Conclusion - Appendices (A to H) - Bibliography - Index of Authors / Index of Biblical Passages / Index of Topics / Index of Definitions |
Exemplaires (1)
Code-barres | Cote | Support | Localisation | Section | Disponibilité |
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CA/E 017 | CA/E 017 | Livre | Bibliothèque principale | Livres empruntables | Prêt possible Disponible |