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Reading the Tapestry

A Literary-Rhetorical Analysis of the Johannine Resurrection Narrative (John 20-21)

by Larry Darnell George (Author)
©2000 Monographs XX, 196 Pages
Series: Studies in Biblical Literature, Volume 14

Summary

Reading the Tapestry proposes a literary-rhetorical, temporal process of reading the fourth Gospel’s resurrection narrative (John 20-21) from the perspective of the implied reader in the text, according to the strategies of the implied author. Informed by narrative criticism and reader response criticism, Larry Darnell George unpacks the narrative and rhetorical devices of the three episodes and twelve scenes and argues that the entire resurrection narrative represents a finely woven tapestry, a coherent unified narrative text on its own terms and as it now stands.

Details

Pages
XX, 196
Year
2000
ISBN (Softcover)
9780820444444
Language
English
Keywords
Resurrection Narrative criticism Rhetoric Biblical exegesis
Published
New York, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt/M., Oxford, Wien, 2000. XX, 196 pp.

Biographical notes

Larry Darnell George (Author)

The Author: Larry Darnell George received his Ph.D. in New Testament and Hebrew Bible from Vanderbilt Graduate School of Religion in 1997. He is the co-editor of What Does It Mean to be Black and Christian? (1995). He is currently the Academic Dean and Assistant Professor of Biblical Literature and Languages at Payne Theological Seminary, Wilberforce, Ohio.

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Title: Reading the Tapestry