Spoken into Being: Self and Name(s) in the Hebrew Bible. Dissertationsschrift 9783161614644, 9783161616204, 316161464X

How are names related to the self in the Hebrew Bible? Are names simply ornamental, or are they tied to the essence of t

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Table of contents :
Cover
Title
Preface
Table of Contents
Abbreviations
Introduction
A. The Aim and the Approach
I. Constellational Anthropology
II. Language as a Form of Being
III. The Integrative Approach
B. Preliminary Methodological Considerations
I. Individual, Person, and Self
II. Proper Names and שם
1. The Proper Name
2. The שם
C. The Choice of Texts
I. Different Periods
II. Different Referents
D. The Structure
Chapter 1: An Exploration of the Self
A. The Question of the Self in the Hebrew Bible
I. Robinson on Corporate Personality
II. Malina on Dyadism
III. Di Vito on Personal Identity
IV. A Contemporary Turn to the "Inner Self"
B. Paul Ricoeur and the Textual Detours
I. Agency and Attestation
1. Decision, Motion, and Consent
2. Attestation
3. Imputation
4. An Ontology of the Self?
5. Bridging Ricoeur with an Anthropology of the Hebrew Bible ... 35 II. Language and the Creative Imagination
1. Articulating Selfhood
2. Actions and Speech Acts
3. The Creative Imagination
III. The Role of Others
IV. Narrative Identity
1. Narrative Identity and the Hebrew Bible
2. Mimesis and Time
3. Temporality and Personal Identity
4. Fiction and Life
C. Summary: Ricoeur, the Dialogical Partner
Chapter 2: A History of Scholarship
A. Onomastics and the Divine שם
B. A Primitive Mentality?
C. Element !: The Essence
I. The Emergence of Primitive Mentality in Exegesis
II. Leaving a Framework - Returning to a Flux
III. A New Approach: The Semantic Essence
D. Element 2: The lexical Meaning
I. The Correctness of Words
II. The Dynamistic View on Language
III. The Literary Function of Proper Names
IV. Summary: The Lexical Meaning
E. Element 3: The Double
F. Element 4: The Social Self
G. Summary: Self and Name(s)
Chapter 3: Self and Symbol (Proper Name)
A. The Proper Name: Being a Symbol
I. Naming: The Person as Symbol
1. Naming, Authority, and Etymologies
2. Communication and Differentiation
3. Election and Procurement
II. Belonging to Others: Families, Genealogies, and Lists
1. The Close Family
2. The Father's House and the Deity
3. Genealogies, Ancestry, and Lists
III. Anonymity: The Elusiveness of the Nameless
IV. After Embodiment: The Continuation or Demise of the Symbol
1. The Proper Name and the Juridical Function
2. The Proper Name and the Heavenly Books
B. Proper Name and the Self
I. "Here I Am!": Samuel's Response (1 Sam 3:4-10)
II. "Recognize me!": David and Nabal (1 Sam 25:10-11)
III. "I Have the Seal of Power!": Jezebel, Ahab, and a Vineyard (1 Kgs 21:5-8)
IV. "Call me Mara!": Naomi and her Broken World (Ruth 1:19-21)
V. "I Have Forgotten and Become Fruitful": Joseph and his Sons (Gen 41:50-52)
VI. "You see me!": Hagar and El Roi (Gen 16:7-14)
VII. "I am YHWH!": The Headline of a Story (Exod 6:2-8)
1. YHWH's Narrative
2. The Dialectic Between Idem and Ipse
C. Summary: Self and Symbol
Chapter 4: Self and Conceptual Metaphor (שם)
A. The Conceptual Metaphor
B. שם: An Object to be Perceived
C. The Somatic Perception
I. Making a שם (Gen 11:4)
Excursus: שם in Physical Space
II. Carrying a שם (Num 6:22-27 and Exod 20:7)
III. A Heavy שם (Ps 72:18-19)
IV. Moving a שם (Ps 148:13 and Hos 2:19)
1. A Moved שם (Ps 148:13)
2. Removing a שם (Hos 2:19)
V. Cutting Off a שם (Zech 13:2)
D. The Proprioceptive Perception
I. Being Inside a שם (Mic 4:5)
II. Containing a שם (Exod 23:21)
III. A Walking שם (2 Chr 26:15)
E. The Visual Perception
I. A Big שם (2 Sam 7:8-9)
II. A Luminous שם (1 Chr 29:10-13)
III. An Unclean שם (Ezek 22:1-5)
F. The Olfactory Perception
G. The Gustatory Perception
H. The Auditory Perception
I. The Perception of Speech
I. Recounting a שם (Ps 22:23-25)
II. Remembering a שם (Exod 23:13)
J. The Quality of a שם
I. A Good שם (Eccl 7:1)
II. A Bad שם (Neh 6:10-14 and Deut 22:13-21)
1. Nehemiah 6:10-14
2. Deuteronomy 22:13-21
III. A Decaying שם (Prov 10:7)
IV. A Newשם (Isa 62:1-5)
K. Summary: Self and Conceptual Metaphor
Conclusion: Spoken into Being
Appendix 1: Occurrences of שם in the Hebrew Bible
Appendix 2: שם as Conceptual Metaphor
Bibliography
Index of References
Index of Modern Authors
Index of Subjects
Recommend Papers

Spoken into Being: Self and Name(s) in the Hebrew Bible. Dissertationsschrift
 9783161614644, 9783161616204, 316161464X

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Forschungen zum Alten Testament 2. Reihe Edited by Konrad Schmid (Zürich) ∙ Mark S. Smith (Princeton) Andrew Teeter (Harvard)

137

Søren Lorenzen

Spoken into Being Self and Name(s) in the Hebrew Bible

Mohr Siebeck

Søren Lorenzen, born 1989; 2017 MTh from Aarhus University; 2021 PhD from Aarhus University; since 2020 Wissenschaftlicher Mitarbeiter, Bonn University. orcid.org/0000-0002-6751-3471

ISBN 978-3-16-161464-4 / eISBN 978-3-16-161620-4 DOI 10.1628/978-3-16-161620-4 ISSN 1611-4914 / eISSN 2568-8367 (Forschungen zum Alten Testament, 2. Reihe) The Deutsche Nationalbibliothek lists this publication in the Deutsche Nationalbibliographie; detailed bibliographic data are available at http://dnb.dnb.de. © 2022  Mohr Siebeck Tübingen, Germany.  www.mohrsiebeck.com This book may not be reproduced, in whole or in part, in any form (beyond that permitted by copyright law) without the publisher’s written permission. This applies particularly to reproductions, translations and storage and processing in electronic systems. The book was printed on non-aging paper by Laupp & Göbel in Gomaringen, and bound by Buchbinderei Nädele in Nehren. Printed in Germany.

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