Difference between revisions of "Chronological and Thematic Order/2"
m |
m |
||
Line 72: | Line 72: | ||
</opinion> | </opinion> | ||
<opinion>Personal vs. National Perspective | <opinion>Personal vs. National Perspective | ||
− | <point><b>Banishment of Yishmael</b> – R. Saadia Gaon, R"Y Kara and Rashbam all imply that the story of the covenant with Avimelekh | + | <point><b>Banishment of Yishmael</b> – R. Saadia Gaon, R"Y Kara and Rashbam all imply that the story of the covenant with Avimelekh took place after Yitzchak's birth but before or in the middle of the story of Yishmael's banishment.<fn>The opening words of the unit, "וַיְהִי בָּעֵת הַהִוא", imply that the story does not follow what took place beforehand but overlaps with it.</fn>  Tanakh might have relayed the events achronologically as it preferred to group the episodes that touch on Avraham's personal family life separately from those which relate to his interactions with outsiders.<fn>In this case, the tight connection between the stories of the birth and expulsion would further motivate grouping them together.</fn></point> |
− | <point><b>Yitzchak Stories</b> – Bereshit 25 tells of Yitzchak marriage, the birth of Yaakov and Esav and their upbringing. These events likely overlapped with those of Bereshit 26, with the first half of Bereshit 26 occurring before the birth (for otherwise it is very difficult to understand how Avimelekh did not know of Rivka and Yitzchak's marital status) and the second half taking place later on.  Rather than interweaving the various elements of each story as a strict chronology would dictate, Torah separates the personal and political strands of the Yitzchak narrative.</point> | + | <point><b>Yitzchak Stories</b> – Bereshit 25 tells of Yitzchak marriage, the birth of Yaakov and Esav, and their upbringing. These events likely overlapped with those of Bereshit 26, with the first half of Bereshit 26 occurring before the birth (for otherwise it is very difficult to understand how Avimelekh did not know of Rivka and Yitzchak's marital status) and the second half taking place later on.  Rather than interweaving the various elements of each story as a strict chronology would dictate, Torah separates the personal and political strands of the Yitzchak narrative.</point> |
− | <point><b>Yosef in Egypt</b></point> | + | <point><b>Yosef in Egypt</b> – After narrating the story of Yosef's interactions with his brothers in Bereshit 42-46, Chapter 47 speaks of how the Egyptians themselves fared throughout the famine. If <a href="Bereshit47-13-23" data-aht="source">Bereshit 47:18</a>'s mention of the "שָּׁנָה הַשֵּׁנִית" refers to the second year of the famine<fn>See Rashi, Ma'asei Hashem and Netziv.</fn> (rather than two years after the family's arrival in Egypt), then the events of the chapter overlap with those of the previous ones. Here, too, the Biblical text portrays the same time period from two perspectives, first focusing on Yosef and his family and then on Yosef and the Egyptians.</point> |
+ | <point><b>Shaul meeting David</b></point> | ||
</opinion> | </opinion> | ||
<opinion>Universal vs.Individual | <opinion>Universal vs.Individual |
Version as of 09:45, 20 November 2019
Chronological and Thematic Order
Exegetical Approaches
Technical Displacement: Minor Details
At times, achronology in the text is a result of technical literary issues. In many cases, the majority and core of a given story is recorded in its proper chronological place and it is just one or two secondary components which are displaced. The displaced unit might be moved from elsewhere to join and thereby complete the central story ("להשלים את הענין") or it might be separated from the main narrative so as not to interrupt the story line ("לא להפסיק את הענין").
Introductions and Epilogues: "להשלים את הענין"
A subordinate component of a story might be moved from its proper chronological place so as to complete a central narrative. It can take the form of a prelude before the main story or an epilogue at the end.
Introduction
An event which occurred earlier is displaced to serve as an introduction and provide necessary background to a later story.
Epilogue
A component of a story which is only to occur later is moved earlier to provide closure to the main unit.
Summary
An episode which occurred and was explicitly mentioned earlier in Tanakh is repeated in order to serve as a summary to a unit.
Headings
An event which is soon to be discussed in the text is mentioned already in the heading of the unit, letting the reader know what is to come. This might take the form of a "כלל ופרט", a general formulation followed by details.
Prologues and Appendices: "לא להפסיק את הענין"
Secondary narrative components might be moved to form a prologue at the very beginning of a unit or an appendix at the end because placing them in their proper chronological place in the middle of the central unit would otherwise break the flow of the main narrative . The episode or topic which is displaced is either irrelevant to the main theme or message of the unit, of lesser import, or of a different literary character.
Prologues
An event is moved from its correct chronological place later in the text and placed at the very beginning of the unit where it will not disrupt the main topic.
Appendices
An episode is moved from its correct chronological place earlier in the narrative and placed at the very end of the unit where it will not disrupt the main topic.
Miscellaneous
Thematic Arrangement: Parallel Units
Tanakh will often prefer thematic ordering over strict chronology, juxtaposing related material even if this means not adhering to a historical timeline. This is perhaps most evident when components of two independent stories overlap in time. Tanakh will focus on each story individually rather than constantly switching back and forth between the two. As such, the same overall time period might be discussed from different vantage points, with material grouped by varying protagonists, perspectives, literary genre or other factors.
Figures
Tanakh will often focus on one individual protagonist at a time, even