Orality often overlooked
One area of NT research that is surprisingly and very often overlooked is the field of orality studies. NT research has a tendency to be dominated by textual and documentary discussions and very often...
View ArticleLiterary and reader-oriented hermeneutics in the blogosphere
The more biblioblogs I read, the more surprised I am at how often topics like narrative and reader-response criticisms, and other reader-oriented hermeneutics are virtually ignored in the blogosphere...
View ArticleBook Notice: James A. Maxey, From Orality to Orality: A New Paradigm for...
This new and interesting book interacts with translation philosophy at the crossroads of biblical performance criticism and social-science criticism in an African context. The folks over at Biblical...
View ArticleMark as Story Reviewed Again (and Apparently Being Read By Others….)
This afternoon my buddy, Matt Whitlock (thanks, Matt!) pointed me to a review of my book (co-edited with Prof. Kelly R. Iverson), Mark as Story: Retrospect and Prospect (Society of Biblical Literature,...
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