Joel's Use of Scripture and Scripture's Use of Joel: Appropriation and Resignification in Second Temple Judaism and Early Christianity
 
John Strazicich
BRILL, 2007 - 441 pages
 
The
 methodological approach employed in this research utilizes the 
hermeneutics of comparative midrash combined with aspects of Bakhtinian 
dialogism and intertextuality. The purpose of this enterprise is to 
discern the function of scripture in Joel and its New Testament 
Nachleben.The terms appropriation and resignification are descriptive of
 the process through which an antecedent text is transformed by its 
displacement, condensation, and recontextualization. These methodologies
 assist in giving an account of the intertextual dialogism involved in a
 text's unrecorded hermeneutics.The scope of the work looks at the use 
of scriptural traditions within the book of Joel during the Second 
Temple period. There is an introduction to the hermeneutical methods 
employed. This is followed by a general introduction to the book of Joel
 in chapter one. Chapters two and three concern the function of 
scripture in Joel. Finally, the last chapter deals with Joel's New 
Testament Nachleben. Each chapter has an introduction and 
conclusion.This work does not eschew the importance of diachronic 
issues. The diachronic method pays attention to the context of an 
antecedent's voice, while the synchronic methodological approach pays 
attention to the function and purpose in which the receptor text 
resignifies the appropriated motifs and allusions. The diachronic 
becomes fused with the synchronic in the process of an allusion's 
recontextualization. This study, in a heuristic manner, focuses on the 
way that each allusion is appropriated and resignified for the needs of 
both Joel's community and those of the later NT, in order to understand 
the function of canonical hermeneutics
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