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This unique edited collection illuminates Paul Ricoeur's engagement with Scripture. The contributors include one of the primary translators, several who studied at the University of Chicago, and some of this generation's noted Ricoeur scholars. The essays discuss Hebrew and Christian Scripture, hermeneutics, and biblical scholarship.
Sommario
Introduction
Joseph Edelheit and James Moore
Chapter 1: Reading Scripture with Paul Ricoeur: Homage
Andres LaCocque
Chapter 2: Resistance and Recognition: Paul Ricoeur on Translation
Kathleen Blamey
Chapter 3: From Exegesis to Allegory: Ricour's Challenge to Biblical Scholarship
Barnabas Aspray
Chapter 4: Biblical Hermeneutics, the Art of Interpretation, and Philosophy of the Self: A Tribute to Paul Ricour and Paul Beauchamp
Alain Thomasset, S.J.
Chapter 5: From a Called to a Responsive Self: Ricoeur and Prophecy
Timo Helenius
Chapter 6: Ricoeur's Biblical Hermeneutics: From Aesthetics to Theology
Steven Kepnes
Chapter 7: Challenging the Male Gaze: The Unabashed Rahab Emerges Through Paul Ricoeur's Hermeneutics
Stephanie Arel
Chapter 8: Paul Ricoeur and the Parable of the Lost Son
Brad DeFord
Chapter 9: Ricoeur's Paradigmatic Challenge to American Evangelical Biblical Hermeneutics
Dan R. Stiver
Chapter 10: Epistles as Revelation: Expanding Ricoeur's Account of Biblical Discourse
B
Info autore
Joseph A. Edelheit is emeritus professor of religious and Jewish studies at St. Cloud State University. James Moore is senior research professor of theology at Valparaiso University. James F. Moore is professor of theology at Valparaiso University.Joseph A. Edelheit is emeritus professor of religious and Jewish studies at St. Cloud State University. James Moore is senior research professor of theology at Valparaiso University. Brian Gregor is assistant professor of philosophy at California State University, Dominguez Hills and Vice President of the Society for Ricoeur Studies.James F. Moore is Associate Professor of Theology at Valparaiso University.
Riassunto
This unique edited collection illuminates Paul Ricoeur's engagement with Scripture. The contributors include one of the primary translators, several who studied at the University of Chicago, and some of this generation's noted Ricoeur scholars. The essays discuss Hebrew and Christian Scripture, hermeneutics, and biblical scholarship.