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A Relevant Way to Read

Autor Margaret G. Sim
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 2022
"A Relevant Way to Read' helps to demystify communication theory in such a way as to encourage biblical scholars and students to open their minds to new ideas about how humans attempt to communicate with one another. It shows how much exegesis in intuitive and gives a theoretical account and support for the processes which we engage in as we attempt to analyse a text. Contextual presuppositions and biases are also considered and factored into the interpretive process. By using Relevance Theory consistently, rather than employing the eclectic method favoured by some scholars who have dabbled in one linguistic theory or another, the book provides a sound theoretical basis on which to build interpretation of text without demanding a new range of competencies from the reader. 'A Relevant Way to Read' does not claim to solve all problems but rather to encourage readers to develop a keener awareness of what communication means. Cognitive approaches are now in the forefront of both anthropological and linguistic studies, and have the potential to be extremely beneficial to biblical studies by opening up new areas for research and reinvestigating some issues perceived as problems in the past."
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780227174425
ISBN-10: 0227174429
Pagini: 144
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 9 mm
Greutate: 0.23 kg
Editura: James Clarke & Co.

Notă biografică

Margaret G. Sim is an International Translation Consultant with SIL and was until recently a lecturer in New Testament at Nairobi Evangelical Graduate School of Theology (1991-2012). Her previous publications include 'Marking Thought and Talk in New Testament Greek' (James Clarke, 2011), 'Particles and Participles: a helpful partnership?' in 'Discourse Studies and Biblical Interpretation' (Logos, 2011) and 'Septuagint' in 'Dictionary of Biblical Translation (American Bible Society, 2013).

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An erudite introduction to relevance theory and its application to biblical criticism, illustrated through an examination of a selection of New Testament texts.