The Library of Hebrew Bible/Old Testament Studies: Bible in Crime Fiction and Drama : Murderous Texts by Alison Jack (2019, Hardcover)

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THE BIBLE IN CRIME FICTION AND DRAMA: MURDEROUS TEXTS (SCRIPTURAL TRACES) By Caroline Blyth & Alison Jack & Andrew Mein & Claudia Camp & Matthew A. Collins - Hardcover.

About this product

Product Identifiers

PublisherBloomsbury Publishing
ISBN-100567677982
ISBN-139780567677983
eBay Product ID (ePID)2309780912

Product Key Features

Number of Pages208 Pages
LanguageEnglish
Publication NameBible in Crime Fiction and Drama : Murderous Texts
Publication Year2019
SubjectBiblical Criticism & Interpretation / General, Mystery & Detective
TypeTextbook
AuthorAlison Jack
Subject AreaLiterary Criticism, Religion
SeriesThe Library of Hebrew Bible/Old Testament Studies
FormatHardcover

Dimensions

Item Height0.5 in
Item Weight16.5 Oz
Item Length9.2 in
Item Width6.1 in

Additional Product Features

Intended AudienceCollege Audience
LCCN2020-304657
TitleLeadingThe
Dewey Edition23
IllustratedYes
Dewey Decimal220.09
Edition DescriptionDigital original
Table Of ContentNotes on Contributors List of Abbreviations 1. Introduction - Caroline Blyth and Alison Jack 2. On the Trail of a Biblical Serial Killer: Sherlock Holmes and the Book of Tobit - Matthew A. Collins 3. Tartan Noir and Sacred Scripture: The Bible as Artefact and Metanarrative in Peter May's Lewis Trilogy - Alison Jack 4. Faith in a Cold Climate: The Bible and Violence in Henning Mankell's Before the Frost - Caroline Blyth 5. 'Understanded of the People': C. J. Sansom's Revelation as a Contemporary Cautionary Tale - Suzanne Bray 6. Where Have All the Good Men Gone? Male Anti-Heroes in the Book of Judges and American Television - Benjamin Bixler 7. 'Long Is the Way and Hard, that Out of Hell Leads Up to Light': Serial Murder as Homily in Se7en - James C. Oleson 8. The Man Who Died: Reading Death in Job with Finnish Noir - Yael Klangwisan 9. The Divine Unsub: Television Crime Procedurals and Biblical Sexual Violence - Dan W. Clanton, Jr 10. Poirot, the Bourgeois Prophet: Agatha Christie's Biblical Adaptations - Hannah M. Strømmen 11. 'A Dangerous World': The Hermeneutics of Agatha Christie's Later Novels - J. C. Bernthal 12. Afterword - Liam McIlvanney Index of Authors Index of Biblical References
SynopsisThe Bible has always enjoyed notoriety within the genres of crime fiction and drama; numerous authors have explicitly drawn on biblical traditions as thematic foci to explore social anxieties about violence, religion, and the search for justice and truth. The Bible in Crime Fiction and Drama brings together a multi-disciplinary scholarship from the fields of biblical interpretation, literary criticism, criminology, and studies in film and television to discuss international texts and media spanning the beginning of the 20th century to the present day. The volume concludes with an Afterword by crime writer and academic, Liam McIvanney. These essays explore both explicit and implicit engagements between biblical texts and crime narratives, analysing the multiple layers of meaning that such engagements can produce - whether by cross-referencing Sherlock Holmes with the murder mystery in the Book of Tobit, observing biblical violence through the eyes of Christian fundamentalists in Henning Mankell's Before the Frost , catching the thread of homily in the serial murders of Se7en, or analysing biblical sexual violence in light of television crime procedurals. The contributors also raise intriguing questions about the significance of the Bible as a religious and cultural text - its association with the culturally pervasive themes of violence, (im)morality, and redemption, and its relevance as a symbol of the (often fraught) location that religion occupies within contemporary secular culture., The Bible has always enjoyed notoriety within the genres of crime fiction and drama; numerous authors have explicitly drawn on biblical traditions as thematic foci to explore social anxieties about violence, religion, and the search for justice and truth. The Bible in Crime Fiction and Drama brings together a multi-disciplinary scholarship from the fields of biblical interpretation, literary criticism, criminology, and studies in film and television to discuss international texts and media spanning the beginning of the 20th century to the present day. The volume concludes with an afterword by crime writer and academic, Liam McIvanney. These essays explore both explicit and implicit engagements between biblical texts and crime narratives, analysing the multiple layers of meaning that such engagements can produce - cross-referencing Sherlock Holmes with the murder mystery in the Book of Tobit, observing biblical violence through the eyes of Christian fundamentalists in Henning Mankell's Before the Frost , catching the thread of homily in the serial murders of Se7en, or analysing biblical sexual violence in light of television crime procedurals. The contributors also raise intriguing questions about the significance of the Bible as a religious and cultural text - its association with the culturally pervasive themes of violence, (im)morality, and redemption, and its relevance as a symbol of the (often fraught) location that religion occupies within contemporary secular culture.
LC Classification NumberPN3448.D4
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