توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Loanwords in Biblical Literature: Rhetorical Studies in Esther, Daniel, Ezra and Exodus
نام کتاب : Loanwords in Biblical Literature: Rhetorical Studies in Esther, Daniel, Ezra and Exodus
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : وام واژه ها در ادبیات کتاب مقدس: مطالعات بلاغی در استر، دانیال، عزرا و خروج
سری : The Library of Hebrew Bible/Old Testament Studies
نویسندگان : Jonathan Thambyrajah
ناشر : T&T Clark
سال نشر : 2022
تعداد صفحات : 321
ISBN (شابک) : 9780567703088 , 9780567703071
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 9 مگابایت
بعد از تکمیل فرایند پرداخت لینک دانلود کتاب ارائه خواهد شد. درصورت ثبت نام و ورود به حساب کاربری خود قادر خواهید بود لیست کتاب های خریداری شده را مشاهده فرمایید.
فهرست مطالب :
Cover\nTitle\nCopyright\nContents\nList of Tables\nAcknowledgements\nList of Abbreviations\n1 Introduction\n 1.1. Linguistics, philology and literature\n 1.2. Existing research on loanwords in the Hebrew Bible\n 1.2.1. Aramaic\n 1.2.2. Akkadian and Sumerian\n 1.2.3. Non-Semitic languages\n 1.3. Linguistics and rhetoric\n 1.3.1. Applying linguistics to literary texts\n 1.3.2. Variation\n 1.3.3. Rhetorical approaches to the Hebrew Bible\n 1.3.4. Rhetorical approaches to narrative texts\n 1.3.5. Rhetorical figures\n 1.3.6. Synthesis\n2 The Loanwords\n 2.1. Nativization of the loanwords\n 2.2. Identifying loanwords and the direction of borrowing\n 2.2.1. Some additional observations on identifying loanwords\n 2.3. The loanwords in Esther\n 2.4. The loanwords in Daniel\n 2.5. The loanwords in Ezra\n 2.6. The loanwords in Exodus\n 2.7. Language of origin\n 2.8. Native synonyms\n 2.8.1. The contrast between loanwords and native synonyms, implicature and creating a literary effect\n 2.8.2. The semantic field of palaces in Hebrew and Aramaic\n 2.8.3. Loanwords and literary effect\n3 Text Analysis – Loanwords as a Means for Group Maintenance\n 3.1. Loanwords as a rhetorical tool for the construction of ethno-linguistic identity\n 3.1.1. Must the loanwords have literary effect?\n 3.1.2. How the loanwords function as a literary device\n 3.1.3. Loanwords in literature and history\n 3.1.4. Constructions of ethnic identity in the Hebrew Bible\n 3.2. Depicting empire, defining the other\n 3.2.1. Loanwords: a literary tool for commenting on other nations\n 3.2.2. Audience – Esther\n 3.2.3. Audience – Daniel\n 3.2.4. Loanwords in Esther and Daniel\n 3.3. Depicting empire, defining the group\n 3.3.1. Loanwords: a literary tool for commenting on the audience’s relationship to other nations\n 3.3.2. Audience – Ezra–Nehemiah\n 3.3.3. Ezra 1–7\n 3.3.4. Conclusion: the loanwords create a sense of linguistic identity as a part of the group identity\n 3.4. Depicting the past, defining the group\n 3.4.1. Loanwords: a literary tool for defining the group’s shared past\n 3.4.2. Audience – Exodus\n 3.4.3. Exodus 25–40\n 3.4.4. Conclusion: the loanwords highlight the group’s shared history in foreign lands\nConclusions\nAppendix One: Root Constraints and the Shared Vocabulary of Aramaic and Hebrew\nAppendix Two: Lists and Distribution of Loanwords and Foreign Names in Esther\nAppendix Three:Lists and Distribution of Loanwords in Daniel\nAppendix Four:Lists and Distribution of Loanwords in Ezra 1–7\nAppendix Five:Lists and Distribution of Loanwords in Exodus 25–40\nAppendix Six:An Outline of Linguistic Change in Aramaic and Akkadian\nBibliography\nIndex of Subjects\nIndex of Biblical Passages\nIndex of Non-Biblical Ancient Sources\nIndex of Loanwords in Esther, Daniel, Ezra 1–7 and Exodus 25–40\nIndex of Words from Ancient Languages