Text-Linguistics and Biblical HebrewBloomsbury Publishing, 2015. jan. 29. - 256 oldal Modern linguistics is a relative newcomer in the scientific world, and text-linguistics, or discourse analysis, is one of its youngest disciplines. This fact has inclined many toward scepticism of its value for the Hebraist, yet much benefit is thereby overlooked. In this work, the author examines recent contributions to Hebrew text-linguistics by Niccacci, Andersen, Eskhult, Khan, and Longacre, evaluating them against a twofold standard of theoretical and methodological integrity, and clarity of communication. An extensive introduction to one particularly promising model of text analysis (from Longacre's tagmemic school) is given, and a step-by-step methodology is presented. Analyses according to this model and methodology are given of seven extended text samples, each building on the findings of the previous analyses: Judg. 2; Lev. 14.1-32; Lev. 6.1-7.37; parallel instructions and historical reports about the building of the Tabernacle, from Exodus 25-40; Judg. 10.6-12.7; and the book of Ruth in its entirety. Considerable attention is given to the question of text-linguistics and reported speech. |
Részletek a könyvből
1 - 5 találat összesen 46 találatból.
19. oldal
... specific function. Others chose from a variety of possibilities (Longacre calls languages of this latter type 'bag-of-tricks' languages, for obvious reasons), and the choice of which item is very often a “stylistic” one.” A language ...
... specific function. Others chose from a variety of possibilities (Longacre calls languages of this latter type 'bag-of-tricks' languages, for obvious reasons), and the choice of which item is very often a “stylistic” one.” A language ...
21. oldal
... specific with regard to the meaning I intend, if my own use of the term might lead to confusion. In the long run, however, I try to stay away from 'discourse' as a technical term—too many people have used it in too 22. In this work ...
... specific with regard to the meaning I intend, if my own use of the term might lead to confusion. In the long run, however, I try to stay away from 'discourse' as a technical term—too many people have used it in too 22. In this work ...
23. oldal
... specific concerns of this study).” It is only fair to acknowledge that these books may not have intended to contribute to an enquiry of exactly this sort, and I acknowledge at. 28. Which, as I mentioned above, are (1) the ...
... specific concerns of this study).” It is only fair to acknowledge that these books may not have intended to contribute to an enquiry of exactly this sort, and I acknowledge at. 28. Which, as I mentioned above, are (1) the ...
33. oldal
... specific syntactic constructions. Non-linguistic readers of Niccacci's work may be tempted to think that the difficulties in understanding this work stem from their own lack of sophistication in this discipline; Niccacci, however, must ...
... specific syntactic constructions. Non-linguistic readers of Niccacci's work may be tempted to think that the difficulties in understanding this work stem from their own lack of sophistication in this discipline; Niccacci, however, must ...
35. oldal
... specific task, and he would not have to claim a distinction between "T" as a full form of the verb' and "T" as a macro-syntactic marker, since "T" as a full form' could still function as a macro-syntactic marker. Comparison of several ...
... specific task, and he would not have to claim a distinction between "T" as a full form of the verb' and "T" as a macro-syntactic marker, since "T" as a full form' could still function as a macro-syntactic marker. Comparison of several ...
Tartalomjegyzék
7 | |
9 | |
11 | |
Chapter 2 EXAMINATION OF KHANS STUDIES AND LONGACRES JOSEPH | 52 |
Chapter 3 AN INTRODUCTION TO ONE MODEL OF TEXT ANALYSIS AND A METHODOLOGY DERIVED FROM IT | 70 |
Chapter 4 TEXTLINGUISTIC OBSERVATIONS ON NARRATIVE AND NONNARRATIVE TEXTTYPES | 123 |
Chapter 5 JEPHTHAH AND RUTHREFINING AND TESTING THE HYPOTHESES | 154 |
Chapter 6 SUMMARY CONCLUSIONS AND IMPLICATIONS | 209 |
Appendix 1 THE TEXT OF JUDGES 2 BHS IN COLUMNAR FORMAT | 220 |
Appendix 2 THE TEXT OF RUTH BHS IN COLUMNAR FORMAT | 223 |
Bibliography | 237 |
Index of Authors | 242 |
Más kiadások - Összes megtekintése
Gyakori szavak és kifejezések
addition analysis approach base beginning Biblical boundary chapter Classical Hebrew clause-types clines concepts conclusions construction contains context deal describe detail difficult discourse distribution embedded episode examined example explanation Expository fact function further give given grammar hand Hebrew Hortatory hypothesis identify indicate initial introduced Joseph Judges kind language less linguistic Longacre Longacre’s look macro-syntactic main-line clauses marked material means methodology Narrative History Niccacci Noun occur off-line clauses paragraph particular patterns peak pericopes Phrase possible Predictive Prefix clauses present Procedural propose question reader reason reference Reported Speech require Ruth seen sentence serve significant simple specific speech formula story structure subordinated subordinated clauses Suffix clause surface syntactic Syntax tagmemic text-linguistic text-type theoretical theory topic unit verb Verbless clause writes