Exploring Zechariah, volume 2 : the development and role of biblical traditions in Zechariah

During the past three decades the book of Zechariah has received increasing attention within the Hebrew Bible guild. This was due no doubt to the appearance of the influential commentaries of Eric and Carol Meyers as well as David Petersen beginning in the 1980s, but also to the increasing focus on the Persian period in historical and biblical scholarship. Research during this period has been diverse, focusing on the composition, the structure, and the reception of this ancient text and all points in between. The guild has been witness to a shift from dominantly diachronic methodologies to a diversity of diachronic, synchronic and a-chronic approaches, reflecting a (con)fusion of modern, postmodern and even premodern sensibilities. It was the book of Zechariah that provided me a fresh direction for research after spending my doctoral years focusing nearly all my attention on Ezra–Nehemiah. My dissertation on Neh 9 ended by giving attention to connections between that penitential prayer and Zech 7–8. Little did I realize that this conclusion was my invitation to two decades of focused attention on this “post-exilic” prophet. Shifting to Zechariah provided me a new challenge to engage deeply with a different genre and tradition (prophetic), but also the opportunity to build on my newfound knowledge of the Persian period. It was a perfect time to enter into the study of Zechariah since there was a growing community of scholars with whom I could converse, dialogue, and debate...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Boda, Mark J.
Format: Libro biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: Society of Biblical Literature 2017
Subjects:Biblia. A.T. Zacarías, PROFETAS MENORES, LITERATURA RELIGIOSA, CRITICA LITERARIA, TEOLOGIA,
Online Access:https://repositorio.uca.edu.ar/handle/123456789/8009
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spelling oai:ucacris:123456789-80092021-04-23T21:33:26Z Exploring Zechariah, volume 2 : the development and role of biblical traditions in Zechariah Boda, Mark J. Biblia. A.T. Zacarías PROFETAS MENORES LITERATURA RELIGIOSA CRITICA LITERARIA TEOLOGIA During the past three decades the book of Zechariah has received increasing attention within the Hebrew Bible guild. This was due no doubt to the appearance of the influential commentaries of Eric and Carol Meyers as well as David Petersen beginning in the 1980s, but also to the increasing focus on the Persian period in historical and biblical scholarship. Research during this period has been diverse, focusing on the composition, the structure, and the reception of this ancient text and all points in between. The guild has been witness to a shift from dominantly diachronic methodologies to a diversity of diachronic, synchronic and a-chronic approaches, reflecting a (con)fusion of modern, postmodern and even premodern sensibilities. It was the book of Zechariah that provided me a fresh direction for research after spending my doctoral years focusing nearly all my attention on Ezra–Nehemiah. My dissertation on Neh 9 ended by giving attention to connections between that penitential prayer and Zech 7–8. Little did I realize that this conclusion was my invitation to two decades of focused attention on this “post-exilic” prophet. Shifting to Zechariah provided me a new challenge to engage deeply with a different genre and tradition (prophetic), but also the opportunity to build on my newfound knowledge of the Persian period. It was a perfect time to enter into the study of Zechariah since there was a growing community of scholars with whom I could converse, dialogue, and debate... 2019-06-21T23:44:23Z 2019-06-21T23:44:23Z 2017 Libro Boda, M.J. Exploring Zechariah, volume 2 : the development and role of biblical traditions in Zechariah [en línea]. Ancient Near East Monographs - Monografías sobre el Antiguo Cercano Oriente, 17. Atlanta: Society of Biblical Literature; Centro de Estudios de Historia del Antiguo Oriente, 2017. Disponible en: https://repositorio.uca.edu.ar/handle/123456789/8009 9780884142003 https://repositorio.uca.edu.ar/handle/123456789/8009 eng Acceso Abierto https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ application/pdf Society of Biblical Literature Pontificia Universidad Católica Argentina. Centro de Estudios de Historia de Antiguo Oriente Boda, M.J. Exploring Zechariah, volume 2 : the development and role of biblical traditions in Zechariah. Atlanta: Society of Biblical Literature; Centro de Estudios de Historia del Antiguo Oriente, 2017 Ancient Near East Monographs - Monografías sobre el Antiguo Cercano Oriente. 2017, 17
institution UCA
collection DSpace
country Argentina
countrycode AR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-uca
tag biblioteca
region America del Sur
libraryname Sistema de bibliotecas de la UCA
language eng
topic Biblia. A.T. Zacarías
PROFETAS MENORES
LITERATURA RELIGIOSA
CRITICA LITERARIA
TEOLOGIA
Biblia. A.T. Zacarías
PROFETAS MENORES
LITERATURA RELIGIOSA
CRITICA LITERARIA
TEOLOGIA
spellingShingle Biblia. A.T. Zacarías
PROFETAS MENORES
LITERATURA RELIGIOSA
CRITICA LITERARIA
TEOLOGIA
Biblia. A.T. Zacarías
PROFETAS MENORES
LITERATURA RELIGIOSA
CRITICA LITERARIA
TEOLOGIA
Boda, Mark J.
Exploring Zechariah, volume 2 : the development and role of biblical traditions in Zechariah
description During the past three decades the book of Zechariah has received increasing attention within the Hebrew Bible guild. This was due no doubt to the appearance of the influential commentaries of Eric and Carol Meyers as well as David Petersen beginning in the 1980s, but also to the increasing focus on the Persian period in historical and biblical scholarship. Research during this period has been diverse, focusing on the composition, the structure, and the reception of this ancient text and all points in between. The guild has been witness to a shift from dominantly diachronic methodologies to a diversity of diachronic, synchronic and a-chronic approaches, reflecting a (con)fusion of modern, postmodern and even premodern sensibilities. It was the book of Zechariah that provided me a fresh direction for research after spending my doctoral years focusing nearly all my attention on Ezra–Nehemiah. My dissertation on Neh 9 ended by giving attention to connections between that penitential prayer and Zech 7–8. Little did I realize that this conclusion was my invitation to two decades of focused attention on this “post-exilic” prophet. Shifting to Zechariah provided me a new challenge to engage deeply with a different genre and tradition (prophetic), but also the opportunity to build on my newfound knowledge of the Persian period. It was a perfect time to enter into the study of Zechariah since there was a growing community of scholars with whom I could converse, dialogue, and debate...
format Libro
topic_facet Biblia. A.T. Zacarías
PROFETAS MENORES
LITERATURA RELIGIOSA
CRITICA LITERARIA
TEOLOGIA
author Boda, Mark J.
author_facet Boda, Mark J.
author_sort Boda, Mark J.
title Exploring Zechariah, volume 2 : the development and role of biblical traditions in Zechariah
title_short Exploring Zechariah, volume 2 : the development and role of biblical traditions in Zechariah
title_full Exploring Zechariah, volume 2 : the development and role of biblical traditions in Zechariah
title_fullStr Exploring Zechariah, volume 2 : the development and role of biblical traditions in Zechariah
title_full_unstemmed Exploring Zechariah, volume 2 : the development and role of biblical traditions in Zechariah
title_sort exploring zechariah, volume 2 : the development and role of biblical traditions in zechariah
publisher Society of Biblical Literature
publishDate 2017
url https://repositorio.uca.edu.ar/handle/123456789/8009
work_keys_str_mv AT bodamarkj exploringzechariahvolume2thedevelopmentandroleofbiblicaltraditionsinzechariah
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