Melville's bibles
Ilana Pardes (Author)
Many writers in antebellum America sought to reinvent the Bible, but no one, Ilana Pardes argues, was as insistent as Melville on redefining biblical exegesis while doing so. In Moby-Dick he not only ventured to fashion a grand new inverted Bible in which biblical rebels and outcasts assume center stage, but also aspired to comment on every imaginable mode of biblical interpretation, calling for a radical reconsideration of the politics of biblical reception. In Melville's Bibles, Pardes traces Melville's response to a whole array of nineteenth-century exegetical writings--literary scriptures, biblical scholarship, Holy Land travel narratives, political sermons, and women's bibles. She shows how Melville raised with unparalleled verve the question of what counts as Bible and what counts as interpretation
Print Book, English, 2008
University of California Press, Berkeley, 2008
Commentaries
xiii, 192 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm
9780520254541, 9780520254558, 0520254546, 0520254554
122974391
Introduction
Playing with Leviathan: Job and the aesthetic turn in biblical exegesis
"Jonah historically regarded": improvisations on Kitto's Cyclopedia of biblical literature
"Call me Ishmael": the BIble and the Orient
Ahab, idolatry, and the question of possession: biblical politics
Rachel's inconsolable cry: the rise of women's Bibles
Epilogue