How Are the Mighty Fallen?: A Dialogical Study of King Saul in 1 SamuelThis book marries the several elements: a given text (1 Samuel), a focal character (King Saul), a spacious and creative theorist (Mikhail Bakhtin), a historical context (the collapse of monarchic Israel and the moment for return. The dilemma for the exile community is to return with royal leadership or without it); a reading challenge is: can a character be a cipher for a corporate experience (Saul represent the whole monarchic experience)? The author argues that the narrative of 1 Samuel may be read as a riddle propounding the complex story of Israel/Judah's experience with kings as an instruction for those pondering leadership choices in the sixth century. The work is an extended reflection on what went wrong with kings and why new leadership must be attempted. The extended riddle of Saul works to show how the life of the king is fundamentally destructive, not because any is malicious but because of many factors of weakness and inadequacy that will be familiar to readers. |
From inside the book
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Page 25
... moves without signaling , and so often confusingly for us.22 They clarify that dialogism is not mere alternation of interlocutors in life or literature , is not simple disagreement or contradiction . At the base ( first ) level , all ...
... moves without signaling , and so often confusingly for us.22 They clarify that dialogism is not mere alternation of interlocutors in life or literature , is not simple disagreement or contradiction . At the base ( first ) level , all ...
Page 28
... moves on to his later ( and related ) point that conversation ( whether it is what goes on by defi- nition in long - used language or the chatter of the political process ) is not in itself inevitably genuinely democratic ( Hirschkop ...
... moves on to his later ( and related ) point that conversation ( whether it is what goes on by defi- nition in long - used language or the chatter of the political process ) is not in itself inevitably genuinely democratic ( Hirschkop ...
Page 33
... move as it might have seemed a generation ago . Once the illusion of detached spectatorship is exposed as not only impossible but undesirable , the critical analysis is seen as participative ( Schneiders 1998 : 9 ) . Schneiders writes ...
... move as it might have seemed a generation ago . Once the illusion of detached spectatorship is exposed as not only impossible but undesirable , the critical analysis is seen as participative ( Schneiders 1998 : 9 ) . Schneiders writes ...
Page 34
... moves on to distinguish spiritualities within the text , those generated by the text , and other post - biblical writings which incorporate biblical texts . That issue may be further distinguished in terms of whether the particular ...
... moves on to distinguish spiritualities within the text , those generated by the text , and other post - biblical writings which incorporate biblical texts . That issue may be further distinguished in terms of whether the particular ...
Page 35
... move a bit further along the question of how a professional biblical scholar engages the biblical text transformatively , I will draw from the work of Schneiders and of Gerald O. West , each of whom is a pro- ficient theorist , a ...
... move a bit further along the question of how a professional biblical scholar engages the biblical text transformatively , I will draw from the work of Schneiders and of Gerald O. West , each of whom is a pro- ficient theorist , a ...
Contents
1 | |
55 | |
CHRONOTOPIC REPRESENTATION OF THE ARK 1 SAMUEL 47 | 116 |
THE AUTHORING OF A KING AND A HERO 1 SAMUEL 812 | 163 |
THE FIRING OF KING SAUL 1 SAMUEL 1315 | 223 |
SAULS DISCOURSES OF DESIRE 1 SAMUEL 1619 | 262 |
PURSUIT AND ESCAPE SURPLUS AND SURVIVAL 1 SAMUEL 2023 | 323 |
LOOPHOLE LANGUAGE AND THE STALKING OF SAUL 1 SAMUEL 2426 | 367 |
THE DEATH OF KING SAUL AND THE ARCHITECTONICS OF HIS CHARACTERIZATION 1 SAMUEL 272 SAMUEL 1 | 411 |
CONCLUSION | 447 |
Bibliography | 468 |
Index of References | 481 |
Index of Authors | 490 |
Other editions - View all
How Are the Mighty Fallen?: A Dialogical Study of King Saul in 1 Samuel Barbara Green Limited preview - 2003 |
How Are the Mighty Fallen?: A Dialogical Study of King Saul in 1 Samuel Barbara Green Limited preview - 2003 |
How Are the Mighty Fallen?: A Dialogical Study of King Saul in 1 Samuel Barbara Green No preview available - 2003 |
Common terms and phrases
Abishai Achish Ahimelech Amalek Amalekite anointed answer asked authoring Bakhtin battle Beth Shemesh biblical text bring Chapter characterizes choice chronotope Clark and Holquist clear communication construction context death deed deity Deuteronomistic History dialogism direct discourse discussion divine drawing dynastic Edelman Elides Elqanah ephod episode exile fact father Fokkelman 1986 genre Gibeah God's Hannah hear hero Hophni and Phinehas human insight Israel Israelites Jabesh Jehoiachin Jobling Jonathan Keilah king king's kingship Kiriath-jearim language least linked loophole māšāl matter McCarter Michal Mikhail Bakhtin Miscall monarchy Morson and Emerson moves Nabal narrative narrator narrator's offered Peninnah perhaps Philistines polyphonic Polzin position possible present priest problem prophet question readers reading relation relationship response role royal Samuel Saul's scene scholars seems sense Shiloh simply sons speak specifically speech spirit story struggle suggests talk thing tion utterance words YHWH YHWH's