Book
Two Books of Ezekiel
Papyrus 967 and the Masoretic Text as Variant Literary Editions
-
Ingrd E. Lilly
Language:
English
Published/Copyright:
2012
Purchasable on brill.com
Purchase Book
About this book
Greek papyrus codex 967 (p967) manifests a different edition of Ezekiel from the Hebrew Masoretic Text (MT). This study defines and uses a "manuscript approach" to argue that p967 qualifies as a variant literary edition of Ezekiel. Methodologically, the approach is rooted in text-critical analysis, clarifies p967's textual significance, and shows that its text usually reflects the Old Greek translation and in many cases an early Hebrew edition of Ezekiel. The literary analysis of p967 and MT procedes according to sets of variants that participate in literary Tendenzen, adopting the principle of coherence found in Literaturkritik. In so doing, the literary analysis identifies the scope and literary character of p967 and MT's meaningful textual variants. Finally, the codicological analysis explores p967's manuscript as an historical and sociological artifact, focusing especially on what the paratextual marks reveal about the interpretive interests of a 3rd century CE community.
Author / Editor information
Ingrid Lilly, Ph.D. (2010) in Hebrew Bible, Emory University, is Assistant Professor of Religious Studies at Western Kentucky University. She is an Assistant Editor for the journal TC: A Journal for Biblical Textual Criticism and co-chairs the Textual Criticism of the Hebrew Bible unit at the Society of Biblical Literature's annual conference.
Topics
Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
June 22, 2012
eBook ISBN:
9789004222458
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
372
eBook ISBN:
9789004222458
Keywords for this book
Ezekiel; Septuagint; textual-criticism; redaction; criticism; codicology; biblical-studies; interpretation; reception; manuscripts
Audience(s) for this book
All those interested in the composition of biblical books, issues of interpretation and reception, the text of Ezekiel, and early Christian uses of the Hebrew Bible, as well as redaction critics, classical philologists, Septuagint scholars, and codicologists.