Language contact, colonial administration, and the construction of identity in ancient Israel : : Language contact, coconstructing the context for contact / / by Samuel L. Boyd.

"In Language Contact, Colonial Administration, and the Construction of Identity in Ancient Israel, Boyd addresses a long-standing critical issue in biblical scholarship: how does the production of the Bible relate to its larger historical, linguistic, and cultural settings in the ancient Near E...

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Superior document:Harvard Semitic monographs ; Volume 66
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Place / Publishing House:Leiden ;, Boston : : BRILL,, [2021]
©2021
Year of Publication:2021
Language:English
Series:Harvard Semitic monographs ; Volume 66.
Physical Description:1 online resource.
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ctrlnum (CKB)4100000011773533
(nllekb)BRILL9789004448766
(MiAaPQ)EBC6481767
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spelling Boyd, Samuel L., author.
Language contact, colonial administration, and the construction of identity in ancient Israel : Language contact, coconstructing the context for contact / by Samuel L. Boyd.
Leiden ; Boston : BRILL, [2021]
©2021
1 online resource.
text txt rdacontent
computer c rdamedia
online resource rdacarrier
Harvard Semitic monographs ; Volume 66
"In Language Contact, Colonial Administration, and the Construction of Identity in Ancient Israel, Boyd addresses a long-standing critical issue in biblical scholarship: how does the production of the Bible relate to its larger historical, linguistic, and cultural settings in the ancient Near East? Using theoretical advances in the study of language contact, he examines in detail the sociolinguistic landscape during the Assyrian, Babylonian, and Achaemenid periods. Boyd then places the language and literature of Ezekiel and Isaiah in this sociolinguistic landscape. Language Contact, Colonial Administration, and the Construction of Identity in Ancient Israel offers the first book-length incorporation of language contact theory with data from the Bible. As a result, it allows for a reexamination of the nature of contact between biblical authors and a series of Mesopotamian empires beginning with Assyria."-- Provided by publisher.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Preface/Acknowledgements -- Abbreviations of Biblical Books and Other Ancient Sources -- Abbreviations for Linguistic Glosses and Terms -- Abbreviations Used in Citations and Bibliography -- 1 Introduction and Scope of the Project -- 1.1 Contact, Colonization, and the Bible -- 1.2 The Comparative Method, Language Contact, and Biblical Studies: an Overview -- 1.3 The Comparative Method and the Search for the Scribe -- 1.4 Contact in the Hebrew Bible: Linguistic Approaches -- 1.5 Scope and Purpose of This Book -- 2 Contact Linguistics: Methodological Introduction and Sociolinguistic Considerations -- 2.1 Introduction to Contact Linguistics -- 2.2 The Study of Language Contact in Its Initial Phases: Coming to Grips with History, Culture, and Power -- 2.3 Brief History of Contact Linguistics as a Field of Study in Modern Times -- 2.4 Major Types of Contact and Debates in the Field -- 2.5 Can Language Contact Theory Be Applied to Ancient Languages? -- 2.6 Conclusion -- 3 Setting the Sociohistorical Context: the Akkadian-Aramaic Situation -- 3.1 Historical Background for Contact -- 3.2 Scribes and Corroborating Evidence for Aramaic/Akkadian Contact -- 3.3 Assyrian Colonial Policy and the Role of Local Vernaculars -- 3.4 Bukhan and Sefire, VTE and D -- 3.5 Legal Texts, Genre, and Limits of Contact -- 3.6 Texts and Translations -- 3.7 Conclusion -- 4 Linguistic Evidences of Language Contact between Aramaic and Akkadian and Their Implications.
4.1 A Linguistic Definition of Aramaic -- 4.2 Akkadian and Aramaic Contact: the Linguistic Data -- 4.3 Lexical and Structural Contact-Induced Changes -- 4.4 The Linguistic Processes of Akkadian/Aramaic Contact -- 4.5 Conclusion -- 5 Language Contact and the Book of Ezekiel -- 5.1 Historical Background and the Study of the Book of Ezekiel -- 5.2 Ezekiel's Access to Mesopotamian Literature -- 5.3 Lexemes in Ezekiel -- 5.4 Structural Evidence of Contact -- 5.5 Conclusion -- 6 Language Contact and the Book of Isaiah -- 6.1 The Critical Study of Isaiah -- 6.2 Isa 2:10, 19, and 21, Contact-Induced Change, and Diachronic Approaches -- 6.3 Isaiah 13:4 -- 6.4 Loans and Literary Layers in Isaiah -- 6.5 Isaiah's Oracles against the Nations, Dialectal Representation, and Language Contact -- 6.6 Second Isaiah, Navigating Empire and Language, and Structural Change in Biblical Hebrew -- 6.7 Conclusion -- 7 Contact, Translation, and the Formation of the Bible -- 7.1 Contact and History -- 7.2 Politics and Colonialism in Language, Literature, and History -- 7.3 Hybridity, Resistance, and Language Contact: How Language Change Helps Map the Navigation of Identity -- 7.4 The Legacy of Structuralism -- 7.5 Scribalism, Orality, and Contact -- 7.6 Language Contact and the Study of the Hebrew Bible -- Bibliography.
Description based on print version record.
Hebrew language Grammar.
Bible. Old Testament Language, style.
90-04-44875-6
ebrary
Harvard Semitic monographs ; Volume 66.
language English
format eBook
author Boyd, Samuel L.,
spellingShingle Boyd, Samuel L.,
Language contact, colonial administration, and the construction of identity in ancient Israel : Language contact, coconstructing the context for contact /
Harvard Semitic monographs ;
Preface/Acknowledgements -- Abbreviations of Biblical Books and Other Ancient Sources -- Abbreviations for Linguistic Glosses and Terms -- Abbreviations Used in Citations and Bibliography -- 1 Introduction and Scope of the Project -- 1.1 Contact, Colonization, and the Bible -- 1.2 The Comparative Method, Language Contact, and Biblical Studies: an Overview -- 1.3 The Comparative Method and the Search for the Scribe -- 1.4 Contact in the Hebrew Bible: Linguistic Approaches -- 1.5 Scope and Purpose of This Book -- 2 Contact Linguistics: Methodological Introduction and Sociolinguistic Considerations -- 2.1 Introduction to Contact Linguistics -- 2.2 The Study of Language Contact in Its Initial Phases: Coming to Grips with History, Culture, and Power -- 2.3 Brief History of Contact Linguistics as a Field of Study in Modern Times -- 2.4 Major Types of Contact and Debates in the Field -- 2.5 Can Language Contact Theory Be Applied to Ancient Languages? -- 2.6 Conclusion -- 3 Setting the Sociohistorical Context: the Akkadian-Aramaic Situation -- 3.1 Historical Background for Contact -- 3.2 Scribes and Corroborating Evidence for Aramaic/Akkadian Contact -- 3.3 Assyrian Colonial Policy and the Role of Local Vernaculars -- 3.4 Bukhan and Sefire, VTE and D -- 3.5 Legal Texts, Genre, and Limits of Contact -- 3.6 Texts and Translations -- 3.7 Conclusion -- 4 Linguistic Evidences of Language Contact between Aramaic and Akkadian and Their Implications.
4.1 A Linguistic Definition of Aramaic -- 4.2 Akkadian and Aramaic Contact: the Linguistic Data -- 4.3 Lexical and Structural Contact-Induced Changes -- 4.4 The Linguistic Processes of Akkadian/Aramaic Contact -- 4.5 Conclusion -- 5 Language Contact and the Book of Ezekiel -- 5.1 Historical Background and the Study of the Book of Ezekiel -- 5.2 Ezekiel's Access to Mesopotamian Literature -- 5.3 Lexemes in Ezekiel -- 5.4 Structural Evidence of Contact -- 5.5 Conclusion -- 6 Language Contact and the Book of Isaiah -- 6.1 The Critical Study of Isaiah -- 6.2 Isa 2:10, 19, and 21, Contact-Induced Change, and Diachronic Approaches -- 6.3 Isaiah 13:4 -- 6.4 Loans and Literary Layers in Isaiah -- 6.5 Isaiah's Oracles against the Nations, Dialectal Representation, and Language Contact -- 6.6 Second Isaiah, Navigating Empire and Language, and Structural Change in Biblical Hebrew -- 6.7 Conclusion -- 7 Contact, Translation, and the Formation of the Bible -- 7.1 Contact and History -- 7.2 Politics and Colonialism in Language, Literature, and History -- 7.3 Hybridity, Resistance, and Language Contact: How Language Change Helps Map the Navigation of Identity -- 7.4 The Legacy of Structuralism -- 7.5 Scribalism, Orality, and Contact -- 7.6 Language Contact and the Study of the Hebrew Bible -- Bibliography.
author_facet Boyd, Samuel L.,
author_variant s l b sl slb
author_role VerfasserIn
author_sort Boyd, Samuel L.,
title Language contact, colonial administration, and the construction of identity in ancient Israel : Language contact, coconstructing the context for contact /
title_sub Language contact, coconstructing the context for contact /
title_full Language contact, colonial administration, and the construction of identity in ancient Israel : Language contact, coconstructing the context for contact / by Samuel L. Boyd.
title_fullStr Language contact, colonial administration, and the construction of identity in ancient Israel : Language contact, coconstructing the context for contact / by Samuel L. Boyd.
title_full_unstemmed Language contact, colonial administration, and the construction of identity in ancient Israel : Language contact, coconstructing the context for contact / by Samuel L. Boyd.
title_auth Language contact, colonial administration, and the construction of identity in ancient Israel : Language contact, coconstructing the context for contact /
title_new Language contact, colonial administration, and the construction of identity in ancient Israel :
title_sort language contact, colonial administration, and the construction of identity in ancient israel : language contact, coconstructing the context for contact /
series Harvard Semitic monographs ;
series2 Harvard Semitic monographs ;
publisher BRILL,
publishDate 2021
physical 1 online resource.
contents Preface/Acknowledgements -- Abbreviations of Biblical Books and Other Ancient Sources -- Abbreviations for Linguistic Glosses and Terms -- Abbreviations Used in Citations and Bibliography -- 1 Introduction and Scope of the Project -- 1.1 Contact, Colonization, and the Bible -- 1.2 The Comparative Method, Language Contact, and Biblical Studies: an Overview -- 1.3 The Comparative Method and the Search for the Scribe -- 1.4 Contact in the Hebrew Bible: Linguistic Approaches -- 1.5 Scope and Purpose of This Book -- 2 Contact Linguistics: Methodological Introduction and Sociolinguistic Considerations -- 2.1 Introduction to Contact Linguistics -- 2.2 The Study of Language Contact in Its Initial Phases: Coming to Grips with History, Culture, and Power -- 2.3 Brief History of Contact Linguistics as a Field of Study in Modern Times -- 2.4 Major Types of Contact and Debates in the Field -- 2.5 Can Language Contact Theory Be Applied to Ancient Languages? -- 2.6 Conclusion -- 3 Setting the Sociohistorical Context: the Akkadian-Aramaic Situation -- 3.1 Historical Background for Contact -- 3.2 Scribes and Corroborating Evidence for Aramaic/Akkadian Contact -- 3.3 Assyrian Colonial Policy and the Role of Local Vernaculars -- 3.4 Bukhan and Sefire, VTE and D -- 3.5 Legal Texts, Genre, and Limits of Contact -- 3.6 Texts and Translations -- 3.7 Conclusion -- 4 Linguistic Evidences of Language Contact between Aramaic and Akkadian and Their Implications.
4.1 A Linguistic Definition of Aramaic -- 4.2 Akkadian and Aramaic Contact: the Linguistic Data -- 4.3 Lexical and Structural Contact-Induced Changes -- 4.4 The Linguistic Processes of Akkadian/Aramaic Contact -- 4.5 Conclusion -- 5 Language Contact and the Book of Ezekiel -- 5.1 Historical Background and the Study of the Book of Ezekiel -- 5.2 Ezekiel's Access to Mesopotamian Literature -- 5.3 Lexemes in Ezekiel -- 5.4 Structural Evidence of Contact -- 5.5 Conclusion -- 6 Language Contact and the Book of Isaiah -- 6.1 The Critical Study of Isaiah -- 6.2 Isa 2:10, 19, and 21, Contact-Induced Change, and Diachronic Approaches -- 6.3 Isaiah 13:4 -- 6.4 Loans and Literary Layers in Isaiah -- 6.5 Isaiah's Oracles against the Nations, Dialectal Representation, and Language Contact -- 6.6 Second Isaiah, Navigating Empire and Language, and Structural Change in Biblical Hebrew -- 6.7 Conclusion -- 7 Contact, Translation, and the Formation of the Bible -- 7.1 Contact and History -- 7.2 Politics and Colonialism in Language, Literature, and History -- 7.3 Hybridity, Resistance, and Language Contact: How Language Change Helps Map the Navigation of Identity -- 7.4 The Legacy of Structuralism -- 7.5 Scribalism, Orality, and Contact -- 7.6 Language Contact and the Study of the Hebrew Bible -- Bibliography.
isbn 90-04-44876-4
90-04-44875-6
callnumber-first B - Philosophy, Psychology, Religion
callnumber-subject BS - The Bible
callnumber-label BS1185
callnumber-sort BS 41185 B693 42021
illustrated Not Illustrated
dewey-hundreds 200 - Religion
dewey-tens 220 - The Bible
dewey-ones 221 - Old Testament (Tanakh)
dewey-full 221.66
dewey-sort 3221.66
dewey-raw 221.66
dewey-search 221.66
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is_hierarchy_title Language contact, colonial administration, and the construction of identity in ancient Israel : Language contact, coconstructing the context for contact /
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