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  • Title: Old Jewish Commentaries on «The Song of Songs» II

    Old Jewish Commentaries on «The Song of Songs» II

    The Two Commentaries of Tanchum Yerushalmi- Text and translation
    by Joseph Alobaidi (Author) 2014
    ©2014 Others
  • Title: Old Jewish Commentaries on the Song of Songs I

    Old Jewish Commentaries on the Song of Songs I

    The Commentary of Yefet ben Eli- Edited and translated from Judeo-Arabic by Joseph Alobaidi
    by Joseph Alobaidi (Volume editor) 2011
    ©2010 Others
  • Title: Edited and Translated with Notes and Commentary, ed. Rifaat Y. Ebied, Malatius M. Malki, and Lionel R. Wickham †. Texts and Studies in Eastern Christianity, 15. Leiden and Boston: Brill, 2020, XVIII, 169 pp.
  • Title: Katja Krause, trans.,  Commentary on Peter Lombard’s Sentences IV.49.2. Medieval Philosophical Texts in Translations, 53. Milwaukee, WI: Marquette University Press, 2020, xiv, 280 pp.
  • Title: Mind, Text, and Commentary

    Mind, Text, and Commentary

    Noetic Exegesis in Origen of Alexandria, Didymus the Blind, and Evagrius Ponticus
    by Blossom Stefaniw (Author) 2011
    ©2010 Thesis
  • Title: 13 Acts of Academic Journalism and Historical Commentary on Human Rights

    13 Acts of Academic Journalism and Historical Commentary on Human Rights

    Opinions, Interventions and the Torsions of Politics
    by Ben Dorfman (Author) 2017
    ©2017 Monographs
  • Title: A Translation of Plato’s «Sophist» with an Introductory Commentary

    A Translation of Plato’s «Sophist» with an Introductory Commentary

    Translated by James Duerlinger
    by James Duerlinger (Author)
    ©2009 Monographs
  • Title: Walter of Châtillon's Alexandreis Book 10 - A Commentary

    Walter of Châtillon's Alexandreis Book 10 - A Commentary

    by Glynn Carol Meter (Author)
    ©1991 Thesis
  • Title: Benedict Nta Tanka's Commentary and Dramatized Ideas on «Disease and Witchcraft in our Society»

    Benedict Nta Tanka's Commentary and Dramatized Ideas on «Disease and Witchcraft in our Society»

    A Schreber Case from Cameroon- Annotated Autobiographical Notes by an African on his Mental Illness
    by Alexander Boroffka (Author)
    ©1980 Others
  • Hermeneutic Commentaries

    ISSN: 1043-5735

    "The question of “interpretation” of the text is at the center of this collection of monographs and commentaries on classical literatures. Interpretation starts with the realisation that at the outset, the sense of a text is an hypothesis to be gradually and constantly revised and ascertained. Grammar, syntax, and rhetoric are certainly the necessary part for this critical operation, but they fall short of giving full sense to the signification of the text. A philological commentary establishes the texts as close as possible to the author’s text, and provides the information necessary for modern readers to understand what the text meant to its contemporary users. But besides the impossibility of achieving this task fully, this sort of information does not provide the sense of the text as it opens itself to the questions of its individuality and universality, its historicity and its transhistorical iterability, as it hides the rules and game of its composition, its difference in order to show its identity. These opposite poles are constantly united and create a tension, a continuous oscillation that are the very domaine of the interpretative analysis, and the conditions of the text’s ever emerging sense . The hermeneutic circle, through which the critical hypothesis is constantly revised and made more precise, can be viewed also as a sort of deconstructive operation, a decomposing of the text in order to recompose it around its now discovered rules and games, of which the author is not necessarily always fully aware. Because of these conditions the sense of a text is more open to the critics than to its author; this point makes the critics conscious that as they are “reading”, they are in some way “writing” the text." "The question of “interpretation” of the text is at the center of this collection of monographs and commentaries on classical literatures. Interpretation starts with the realisation that at the outset, the sense of a text is an hypothesis to be gradually and constantly revised and ascertained. Grammar, syntax, and rhetoric are certainly the necessary part for this critical operation, but they fall short of giving full sense to the signification of the text. A philological commentary establishes the texts as close as possible to the author’s text, and provides the information necessary for modern readers to understand what the text meant to its contemporary users. But besides the impossibility of achieving this task fully, this sort of information does not provide the sense of the text as it opens itself to the questions of its individuality and universality, its historicity and its transhistorical iterability, as it hides the rules and game of its composition, its difference in order to show its identity. These opposite poles are constantly united and create a tension, a continuous oscillation that are the very domaine of the interpretative analysis, and the conditions of the text’s ever emerging sense . The hermeneutic circle, through which the critical hypothesis is constantly revised and made more precise, can be viewed also as a sort of deconstructive operation, a decomposing of the text in order to recompose it around its now discovered rules and games, of which the author is not necessarily always fully aware. Because of these conditions the sense of a text is more open to the critics than to its author; this point makes the critics conscious that as they are “reading”, they are in some way “writing” the text." "The question of “interpretation” of the text is at the center of this collection of monographs and commentaries on classical literatures. Interpretation starts with the realisation that at the outset, the sense of a text is an hypothesis to be gradually and constantly revised and ascertained. Grammar, syntax, and rhetoric are certainly the necessary part for this critical operation, but they fall short of giving full sense to the signification of the text. A philological commentary establishes the texts as close as possible to the author’s text, and provides the information necessary for modern readers to understand what the text meant to its contemporary users. But besides the impossibility of achieving this task fully, this sort of information does not provide the sense of the text as it opens itself to the questions of its individuality and universality, its historicity and its transhistorical iterability, as it hides the rules and game of its composition, its difference in order to show its identity. These opposite poles are constantly united and create a tension, a continuous oscillation that are the very domaine of the interpretative analysis, and the conditions of the text’s ever emerging sense . The hermeneutic circle, through which the critical hypothesis is constantly revised and made more precise, can be viewed also as a sort of deconstructive operation, a decomposing of the text in order to recompose it around its now discovered rules and games, of which the author is not necessarily always fully aware. Because of these conditions the sense of a text is more open to the critics than to its author; this point makes the critics conscious that as they are “reading”, they are in some way “writing” the text."

    1 publications

  • Title: The Book of Daniel

    The Book of Daniel

    The Commentary of R. Saadia Gaon
    by Joseph Alobaidi (Author)
    ©2006 Others
  • Title: The Messiah in Isaiah 53

    The Messiah in Isaiah 53

    The commentaries of Saadia Gaon, Salmon ben Yeruham and Yefet ben Eli on Is 52:13-53:12- Edition and translation
    by Joseph Alobaidi (Volume editor)
    ©1998 Monographs
  • Title: Caesar and the Storm

    Caesar and the Storm

    A Commentary on Lucan "De Bello Civili</I>, Book 5 lines 476-721
    by Monica Matthews (Author)
    ©2008 Monographs
  • Title: First Lessons

    First Lessons

    Book 1 of Seneca’s "Epistulae Morales</I> – A Commentary
    by Christine Richardson-Hay (Author)
    ©2006 Thesis
  • Title: Black Australian Literature

    Black Australian Literature

    A bibliography of fiction, poetry, drama, oral traditions and non-fiction, including critical commentary, 1900-1991
    by Heinz Schürmann-Zeggel (Author) Heinz Schürmann-Zeggel (Author)
    ©2000 Others
  • Title: Ibrahim ibn Yaqub’s Account of His Travel to Slavic Countries as Transmitted by Al-Bakri

    Ibrahim ibn Yaqub’s Account of His Travel to Slavic Countries as Transmitted by Al-Bakri

    With Contemporary Commentaries edited by Mustafa Switat
    by Tadeusz Kowalski (Author) Mustafa Switat (Revision) 2023
    Monographs
  • Title: The Gospel of Luke

    The Gospel of Luke

    A Hypertextual Commentary
    by Bartosz Adamczewski (Author) 2015
    ©2016 Monographs
  • Title: The Gospel of Mark

    The Gospel of Mark

    A Hypertextual Commentary
    by Bartosz Adamczewski (Author) 2014
    ©2014 Monographs
  • Title: The Wisdom of Zhuang Zi on Daoism

    The Wisdom of Zhuang Zi on Daoism

    Translated with Annotations and Commentaries by Chung Wu
    by Chung Wu (Author)
    ©2008 Monographs
  • Title: The Songs of Peire Vidal

    The Songs of Peire Vidal

    Translation and Commentary
    by Veronica M. Fraser (Author)
    ©2006 Monographs
  • Title: Foundations of American Political Thought

    Foundations of American Political Thought

    Readings and Commentary
    by Raymond Polin (Volume editor) Constance Polin (Volume editor) 2013
    ©2006 Monographs
  • Title: Jonathan Swift’s «On Poetry: A Rapsody»

    Jonathan Swift’s «On Poetry: A Rapsody»

    A Critical Edition with a Historical Introduction and Commentary
    by Melanie Just (Author)
    ©2005 Thesis
  • Title: The Acts of the Apostles

    The Acts of the Apostles

    A Hypertextual Commentary
    by Bartosz Adamczewski (Author) 2023
    ©2023 Monographs
  • Title: God, Guns, Capitalism, and Hypermasculinity

    God, Guns, Capitalism, and Hypermasculinity

    Commentaries on the Culture of Firearms in the United States
    by Warren J. Blumenfeld (Author) 2021
    ©2021 Textbook
  • Title: Samuel–Kings

    Samuel–Kings

    A Hypertextual Commentary
    by Bartosz Adamczewski (Author) 2021
    ©2021 Monographs
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