The Bible and the Comic Vision

The Bible and the Comic Vision

by J. William Whedbee
The Bible and the Comic Vision

The Bible and the Comic Vision

by J. William Whedbee

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Overview

This study explores in a comprehensive and provocative way the presence of comedy in the Hebrew Scriptures. Apart from the occasional recognition of comic forms or motifs in biblical dress, the vast majority of interpreters have usually discounted or even disdained the possibility of the Bible having any significant place for the comic vision. This book attempts to make amends for this short-sighted, prejudicial perspective. Using a broad, eclectic view of comedy, it offers an in-depth analysis of such richly diverse biblical texts as Genesis, Exodus, Esther, Jonah, Job and the Song of Songs. Showing how comedy oscillates between the poles of attack and affirmation, critique and celebration, this exploration brings to light the biblical appropriation of the comic vision as a vital strategy to overcome death and despair and to revel in life and laughter.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780521097611
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication date: 01/08/2009
Pages: 332
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.50(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

J. William Whedbee is the Nancy M. Lyon Professor of Biblical Literature and History at Pomona College (Claremont, California). He is also the author of Isaiah and Wisdom.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements; Note on translation and transliteration; Introduction: an anatomy of comedy in the Bible; Part I. The Genesis of Comedy - The Comedy of Genesis: 1. The comedy of creation; 2. Domestic comedy in the household of faith: Israel's fathers and mothers as comic figures; Part II. Generating Comedy: Biblical texts and the drive to comic regeneration: 3. Liberation and laughter: Exodus and Esther as two comedies of deliverance; 4. Jonah as joke: a comedy of contradiction, caricature and compassion; 5. The comedy of Job: creation, chaos and carnival; 6. Paradox and parody in the Song of Soloman: towards a comic reading of the Song of Songs; Conclusion: towards a comprehensive view of biblical comedy; Bibliography; Indexes.
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