Reading the Bible ethically [electronic resource] : recovering the voice in the text / by Eric J. Douglass.

By: Douglass, Eric J., M. DivMaterial type: TextTextSeries: Biblical interpretation series: v. 133.Publisher: Leiden ; Boston : Brill, c2014Description: 1 online resource (301 p.)ISBN: 9004282874; 9789004282872Subject(s): Bible -- Criticism, interpretation, etc | Bible -- Hermeneutics | Bible -- Reading | Bible | Hermeneutics | ReadingGenre/Form: Criticism, interpretation, etc.Additional physical formats: No titleDDC classification: 220.6 LOC classification: BS476 | .D68 2014Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
The disappearing author -- Writing as an intentional act -- Subjectivity, texts, and creation -- Reading as an intentional act -- Problems in the reader's paradise -- Connecting the author and the text -- Excursus: the ideal communication situation -- Intentional ways of reading -- A way forward.
Summary: All interpretive systems deal with the author. Modern systems consider the text to be autonomous, so that it is disconnected from the author's interests. In this book, Eric Douglass reconsiders this connection. His central argument is that the author is a subject who reproduces her culture and her subjectivity in the text. As the author reproduces her subjectivity, the text functions as the author's voice. This allows Douglass to apply ethical principles to interpretation, where that voice is treated as a subject for conversation, and not an object for manipulation. He uses this to texture the reading process, so that an initial reading takes account of the author's communication, while a second reading critiques that communication.
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Includes bibliographical references (p. 277-293) and indexes.

The disappearing author -- Writing as an intentional act -- Subjectivity, texts, and creation -- Reading as an intentional act -- Problems in the reader's paradise -- Connecting the author and the text -- Excursus: the ideal communication situation -- Intentional ways of reading -- A way forward.

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All interpretive systems deal with the author. Modern systems consider the text to be autonomous, so that it is disconnected from the author's interests. In this book, Eric Douglass reconsiders this connection. His central argument is that the author is a subject who reproduces her culture and her subjectivity in the text. As the author reproduces her subjectivity, the text functions as the author's voice. This allows Douglass to apply ethical principles to interpretation, where that voice is treated as a subject for conversation, and not an object for manipulation. He uses this to texture the reading process, so that an initial reading takes account of the author's communication, while a second reading critiques that communication.

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