Difference between revisions of "Literary Devices – Bereshit 26/0"
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</category> | </category> | ||
<category>Allusions | <category>Allusions | ||
− | At times, a story in Tanakh will allude to a previous one, calling on the reader to compare the two. | + | <p>At times, a story in Tanakh will allude to a previous one, calling on the reader to compare the two.</p> |
<subcategory>Yitzchak and Avraham | <subcategory>Yitzchak and Avraham | ||
− | <a href="https://mg.alhatorah.org/Dual/Biblical_Parallels/Bereshit/26.1">Makbilot Bamikra</a> points out multiple implicit and explicit allusions to the Avraham narrative in this chapter, presenting Yitzchak's life as mirroring that of his father's.: < | + | <p><a href="https://mg.alhatorah.org/Dual/Biblical_Parallels/Bereshit/26.1">Makbilot Bamikra</a> points out multiple implicit and explicit allusions to the Avraham narrative in this chapter, presenting Yitzchak's life as mirroring that of his father's.:</p> |
<ul> | <ul> | ||
<li>Both Avraham and Yitzchak experience famine in the land of Israel.<fn>Verse 1 draws an explicit comparison between the two.</fn></li> | <li>Both Avraham and Yitzchak experience famine in the land of Israel.<fn>Verse 1 draws an explicit comparison between the two.</fn></li> | ||
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<category>Type Scene | <category>Type Scene | ||
<subcategory>Wife-Sister | <subcategory>Wife-Sister | ||
− | Stories in which one poses one's wife as one’s sister are examples of a type-scene, a literary technique in which a basic narrative sequence appears multiple times in Tanakh, each time with modifications that serve the needs of the specific story. Paying attention to the deviations from the expected template often reveals the hidden messages of the individual story. | + | <p>Stories in which one poses one's wife as one’s sister are examples of a type-scene, a literary technique in which a basic narrative sequence appears multiple times in Tanakh, each time with modifications that serve the needs of the specific story. Paying attention to the deviations from the expected template often reveals the hidden messages of the individual story. |
− | </subcategory> | + | </subcategory></p> |
<subcategory>Articles | <subcategory>Articles | ||
<ul> | <ul> |
Version as of 09:03, 4 July 2023
Fatal 76: Opening and ending tag mismatch: p line 32 and subcategory
32: <p>Stories in which one poses one's wife as one’s sister are examples of a type-scene, a literary technique in which a basic narrative sequence appears multiple times in Tanakh, each time with modifications that serve the needs of the specific story. Paying attention to the deviations from the expected template often reveals the hidden messages of the individual story.
33: </subcategory></p>