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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: A.J. CulpPublisher: Rowman & Littlefield Imprint: Lexington Books/Fortress Academic Dimensions: Width: 16.10cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 23.30cm Weight: 0.558kg ISBN: 9781978706903ISBN 10: 1978706901 Pages: 246 Publication Date: 01 November 2019 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviewsThis book is long overdue. Many students of Deuteronomy have expressed their hunches about how the Torah of Moses perceives memory and how memories are created. Appealing to recent social scientific studies on the subject, A. J. Culp has constructed firm theoretical foundations for discussions of memory in Deuteronomy. While memory features more prominently here than elsewhere, we may adapt and apply his methods and insights to other biblical books as well. The author begins quite theoretically, but his discussion is crisp and clear and accessible to a wide readership. Culp's work on story, ritual, and song as significant memory vectors in the teaching [Torah] of Moses is outstanding. I wish I had this book twenty years ago! -- Daniel I. Block, Wheaton College, emeritus Deuteronomy is a book in which memory plays a central role, particularly as it seeks to shape Israel's corporate life. Drawing on the insights of developments in memory theory and using this in close and careful readings of the text, A. J. Culp helps us realise why and how this important aspect of the book can be recovered while also noting the different ways Deuteronomy draws on memory in shaping the commitments of its audience. Culp has not only reminded us of the importance of this motif for the book, he has creatively shown us how this continues to be important for those of us who read this book as Scripture. -- David G. Firth, Trinity College Bristol / University of the Free State This book is long overdue. Many students of Deuteronomy have expressed their hunches about how the Torah of Moses perceives memory and how memories are created. Appealing to recent social scientific studies on the subject, A. J. Culp has constructed firm theoretical foundations for discussions of memory in Deuteronomy. While memory features more prominently here than elsewhere, we may adapt and apply his methods and insights to other biblical books as well. The author begins quite theoretically, but his discussion is crisp and clear and accessible to a wide readership. Culp’s work on story, ritual, and song as significant memory vectors in the teaching [Torah] of Moses is outstanding. I wish I had this book twenty years ago! -- Daniel I. Block, Wheaton College, emeritus Deuteronomy is a book in which memory plays a central role, particularly as it seeks to shape Israel's corporate life. Drawing on the insights of developments in memory theory and using this in close and careful readings of the text, A. J. Culp helps us realise why and how this important aspect of the book can be recovered while also noting the different ways Deuteronomy draws on memory in shaping the commitments of its audience. Culp has not only reminded us of the importance of this motif for the book, he has creatively shown us how this continues to be important for those of us who read this book as Scripture. -- David G. Firth, Trinity College Bristol / University of the Free State Author InformationA. J. Culp is lecturer in Old Testament and biblical languages at Malyon Theological College and honorary research fellow at the University of Queensland. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |