Fr. 236.00

Dawn of Agriculture and the Earliest States in Genesis 1-11

English · Hardback

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Description

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This book invites a close textual encounter with the first 11 chapters of Genesis as an intimate drama of marginalised peoples wrestling with the rise of the world's first grain states in the Mesopotamian alluvium.
The initial 11 chapters of Genesis are often considered discordant and fragmentary, despite being a story of beginnings within the context of the Bible. Readers discover how these formative chapters cohere as a cross-generational account of peoples grappling with the hegemonic spread of domesticated grain production and the concomitant rise of the pristine states of Mesopotamia. The book reveals how key episodes from the Genesis narrative reflect major societal revolutions of the Neolithic period in Mesopotamia through a three-fold hermeneutical method: literary analysis of the Bible and contemporary cuneiform texts; modern scholarship from archaeological, anthropological, ecological, and historical sources; and relevant exegesis from the Second Temple and rabbinical era. These three strands entwine to recount a generally sequential story of the earliest archaic states as narrated by non-elites at the margins of these emerging state spaces.
The Dawn of Agriculture and the Earliest States in Genesis 1-11 provides a fascinating reading of the first 11 chapters of Genesis, appealing to students and scholars of the Hebrew Bible and the Near East, as well as those working on ecological injustice from a religious vantage point.

List of contents

1. Subversive Scripture; 2. Paradise Lost; 3. Acquiring Man; 4. A Tale of Two Wives and a City; 5. Noah the Ploughman; 6. The Flooded State; 7. A Slave to Your Brothers; 8. King of the Four Corners of the Universe; Conclusion.

About the author










Dr. Natan Levy is a Lecturer at Leo Baeck College in the United Kingdom and Head of Operations at Faiths Forum for London. He received his rabbinical ordination from Rabbi Brovender and Rabbi Riskin, his doctorate in Environmental Theology from Bristol University, and an MA in Jewish Studies from King's College, London. Rabbi Levy was the environmental liaison to the former Chief Rabbi of the Commonwealth, Lord Sacks. Rabbi Levy is the co-author of Sharing Eden: Green Teachings from Jews, Christians and Muslims.


Summary

This book invites a close textual encounter with the first 11 chapters of Genesis as an intimate drama of marginalised peoples wrestling with the rise of the world’s first grain states in the Mesopotamian alluvium.

Report

"Levy combines scholarship in several disciplines, close reading of one of the world's most influential texts, and a hermeneutical wisdom that brilliantly illuminates the relevance of that text to the twenty-first century. The result is both convincing and original-not least in the illumination given by ancient history, archaeology, and rabbinic midrashic interpretation. This is Genesis for our time, relating not only to challenges such as environmental emergency, global inequality, mass migration, and widespread state coercion, but also to the need for deep spiritual and ethical resources in responding to them." - David F. Ford OBE, Regius Professor of Divinity Emeritus, University of Cambridge

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