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E-grāmata: Exodus-Numbers: A Hypertextual Commentary

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This monograph demonstrates that the books of ExodusNumbers, taken together, are the result of one, highly creative, hypertextual reworking of the book of Deuteronomy. This detailed reworking consists of around 1,200 strictly sequentially organized conceptual, and at times also linguistic correspondences between ExodusNumbers and Deuteronomy. The strictly sequential, hypertextual dependence on Deuteronomy explains numerous surprising features of ExodusNumbers. The critical analysis of ExodusNumbers as a coherently composed hypertextual work disproves hypotheses of the existence in these writings of Priestly and non-Priestly materials or multiple literary layers.
Introduction 11(30)
Sequential hypertextuality
12(7)
Exodus-Numbers and Deuteronomy
19(13)
Date of composition
32(5)
Place of composition
37(4)
Chapter 1 Exodus as a sequential hypertextual reworking of Deut 1:1-12:12
41(82)
1.1 Exod 1 (cf. Deut 1:1-39b)
41(6)
1.2 Exod 2 (cf. Deut l:39c-46)
47(3)
1.3 Exod 3 (cf. Deut 2-3)
50(5)
1.4 Exod 4:1-17 (cf. Deut 4:1-18)
55(3)
1.5 Exod 4:18-31 (cf. Deut 4:19-35)
58(3)
1.6 Exod 5:1-6:1 (cf. Deut 4:36-5:3)
61(3)
1.7 Exod 6:2-7:13 (cf. Deut 5:4-16)
64(5)
1.8 Exod 7:14-11:10 (cf. Deut 5:17-31)
69(4)
1.9 Exod 12:1-13 (cf. Deut 5:32-6:15)
73(3)
1.10 Exod 12:14-28 (cf. Deut 6:16-25)
76(3)
1.11 Exod 12:29-51 (cf. Deut 7:1-12)
79(3)
1.12 Exod 13:1-16 (cf. Deut 7:13-15)
82(3)
1.13 Exod 13:17-14:31 (cf. Deut 7:16-21)
85(5)
1.14 Exod 15:1-21 (cf. Deut 7:21b-26)
90(3)
1.15 Exod 15:22-16:36 (cf. Deut 8:1-14)
93(4)
1.16 Exod 17 (cf. Deut 8:15-9:3)
97(2)
1.17 Exod 18-31 (cf. Deut 9:4-11)
99(6)
1.18 Exod 32-33 (cf. Deut 9:12-29)
105(6)
1.19 Exod 34 (cf. Deut 10:1-5)
111(3)
1.20 Exod 35 (cf. Deut 10:6-11:32)
114(5)
1.21 Exod 36-40 (cf. Deut 12:1-12)
119(4)
Chapter 2 Leviticus as a sequential hypertextual reworking of Deut 12:13-17:13
123(30)
2.1 Lev 1-7 (cf. Deut 12:13-18b)
123(3)
2.2 Lev 8-9 (cf. Deut 12:18c-28)
126(2)
2.3 Lev 10 (cf. Deut 12:29-14:3)
128(3)
2.4 Lev 11 (cf.Deut 14:4-21e)
131(2)
2.5 Lev 12-22 (cf. Deut 14:21f-29)
133(6)
2.6 Lev 23:1-14 (cf.Deut 15:1-16:8)
139(2)
2.7 Lev 23:15-22 (cf. Deut 16:9-11)
141(2)
2.8 Lev 23:23-44 (cf. Deut 16:12-17a)
143(1)
2.9 Lev 24-25 (cf. Deut 16:17b-20)
144(3)
2.10 Lev 26-27 (cf.Deut 16:21-17:13)
147(6)
Chapter 3 Numbers as a sequential hypertextual reworking of Deut 17:14-34:12
153(56)
3.1 Num 1-2 (cf. Deut 17:14-20)
153(3)
3.2 Num 3-8 (cf. Deut 18:1-7a)
156(4)
3.3 Num 9:1-11:3 (cf. Deut 18:7b-14)
160(3)
3.4 Num 11:4-12:16 (cf.Deut 18:15-22)
163(3)
3.5 Num 13:1-26 (cf. Deut 19)
166(4)
3.6 Num 13:27-14:45 (cf. Deut 20:1-17)
170(7)
3.7 Num 15:1-18:32b (cf.Deut20:18-20)
177(2)
3.8 Num 18:32c-19:22 (cf.Deut 21:1-23:1)
179(4)
3.9 Num 20:1-22:1 (Deut 23:2-5b)
183(5)
3.10 Num 22:2-25:19 (cf. Deut 23:5c-9)
188(3)
3.11 Num 26 (cf.Deut 23:10-30:20)
191(2)
3.12 Num 27 (cf.Deut 31:1-8)
193(3)
3.13 Num 28-31 (cf. Deut 31:9-32:45)
196(3)
3.14 Num 32-33 (cf.Deut 32:46-51)
199(4)
3.15 Num 34-35 (cf. Deut 32:52-33:29)
203(3)
3.16 Num 36 (cf. Deut 34)
206(3)
General conclusions 209(8)
Bibliography 217(1)
Primary sources 217(1)
General 217(1)
Israelite-Jewish 217(1)
Graeco-Roman 217(1)
Secondary literature 217(34)
Index of ancient sources 251
Bartosz Adamczewski is Associate Professor of biblical sciences at Cardinal Stefan Wyszyski University in Warsaw (Poland). He has published eleven books and numerous articles on the relationships between biblical writings and also on their relationships with historical facts.