Notice bibliographique
- Notice
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017 .. $o OCoLC $a 904950360 $k OHX $l eng $n rda $m OCLCO $m OCLCQ $m ERASA $m BTCTA $m YDXCP $m CHVBK $m CGU $m OCLCF $m OCLCO $m UAB $m OCLCO $m UBY $m OCLCO $m CDX $m OCLCQ
020 .. $a 9789042930735 $a 904293073X
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051 .. $a txt $b n
245 1. $a On the fringe of commentary $d Texte imprimé $e metatextuality in ancient Near Eastern and ancient Mediterranean cultures $f edited by Sydney H. Aufrère, Philip S. Alexander and Zlatko Pleše $g in association with Cyril Jacques Bouloux
260 .. $a Leuven $c Uitgeverij Peeters en Departement Oosterse studies $d cop. 2014
280 .. $a xx, 472 pages $d 25 cm
295 1. $a Orientalia Lovaniensia analecta $x 0777-978X $v 232
300 .. $a International conference proceedings, September 25th-27th 2008, MMSH, Aix-Marseille
University
300 .. $a Includes bibliographical references
330 .. $a This volume contains the papers of the second meeting of the international scholarly
network "The Hermeneutic of Judaism, Christianity and Islam," held in Aix-en-Provence
(September 25-27, 2008). Drawing on Gerard Genette's theory of the five different
types of "transtextuality" (Palimpsestes, Paris 1982) - intertextuality, paratextuality,
metatextuality, hypertextuality, and architextuality -, the volume discusses the practices
of metatextuality as diverse as commentaries, hypomnemata, pesharim, targumim, Talmud,
allegoresis, glosses, scholia, catenae, questions-and-responses (erotapocriseis),
prophetic extracts, hypotheses, homilies, integumenta and involucra, Keys to Dreams,
translations, and transliterations in the ancient Mediterranean and Near Eastern cultures.
Presented with an introduction designed to expand and re-contextualize this issue,
the eighteen communications discuss common strategies of metatextuality in Greek and
Jewish culture as well as its various manifestations in the Septuagint and other Jewish
texts, in the literature of the Ancient Near East and Egypt, in the Greco-Roman world,
and in the late antique and medieval literature