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El. knyga: Mark as Story: An Introduction to the Narrative of a Gospel

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  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 01-Apr-2012
  • Leidėjas: Augsburg Fortress
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781451411041
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  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 01-Apr-2012
  • Leidėjas: Augsburg Fortress
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781451411041
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In this third edition of Mark as Story, Rhoads, Dewey, and Michie take their treatment of the Gospel of Mark to new levels. While retaining their clear and thorough analysis of Mark as a narrative, they now place their study of Mark in the context of orality. The new preface explains the role of Mark in a predominantly oral culture. Throughout the study, they refer to the author as composer, the narrator as performer, the Gospel as oral composition, and the audience as gathered communities. The conclusion hypothesizes a performance scenario of Mark in Palestine shortly after the Roman-Judean War of 66 to 70 CE.

The new edition also highlights the dimensions of Mark that stand in contrast to imperial worldviews and values. The authors argue that the performance of Mark itself was a means to draw audiences into a non-imperial world based on mutual service rather than hierarchical domination. In so doing, they shift the Gospels center of gravity from the end of the story to the beginning, configuring it not as "a passion narrative with an extended introduction" but as "the arrival of the rule of God with an extended denouement."Performing Mark: The appendices for students at the end of the book that offer exercises to interpret the narrative of Mark now also include "Exercises for Learning and Telling Episodes" from the Gospel of Mark by heart as part of the learning process.

Preface to the Third Edition xi
Mark as an Oral/Aural Composition xi
The Importance of the Cosmic Dimensions of Mark's Story xii
The Roman Imperial Context xiii
Introduction: The Gospel of Mark as Story 1(8)
The Historical Context of the Gospel of Mark
2(1)
What Type of Story Did Mark Compose?
2(1)
The Coherence of Mark's Narrative
3(1)
The Story World
4(1)
Guidelines for Reading Mark as a Story
5(1)
A Narrative Method for Interpreting Mark
6(3)
Chapter 1 The Gospel of Mark
9(30)
Introduction to the Translation
9(2)
The Gospel of Mark
11(28)
Chapter 2 The Narrator
39(24)
The Role of the Narrator
39(5)
The narrator speaks from outside the story world
41(1)
The narrator is not bound by time or space
41(1)
Mark's narrator is omniscient
41(1)
The narrator guides by means of "asides"
42(1)
The narrator gives the audience privileged knowledge
43(1)
The Narrator's Point of View
44(2)
The narrator is not neutral
44(1)
The narrator's standards of judgment
45(1)
The Narrator's Style and Tempo
46(1)
The Narrator's Patterns of Repetition in Storytelling
47(7)
Verbal threads
48(1)
Foreshadowing and retrospection
48(1)
Two-step progressions
49(2)
Type-scenes
51(1)
Sandwich episodes
51(1)
Framing episodes
52(1)
Episodes in a concentric pattern
52(2)
Progressive episodes in series of three
54(1)
Other Literary Features
54(6)
Questions
55(1)
Riddles
56(1)
Quotations from the writings
57(1)
Prophecies
58(1)
Irony
59(1)
Conclusion
60(3)
Chapter 3 The Settings
63(10)
The Cosmic Setting
64(2)
The Political-Cultural Setting
66(1)
The Journey
66(6)
Patterns of movement on the journey
67(2)
Settings recalling Israel's past
69(1)
Public and private settings
70(1)
The journey as the way of God
71(1)
Conclusion
72(1)
Chapter 4 The Plot
73(26)
Approaches to the Plot
73(5)
The unity of Mark's plot
73(1)
Beginning, middle, and end
74(1)
Connections in Mark's plot
75(1)
The fulfillment or nonfulfillment of expectations
76(1)
The outcome of Mark's plot
76(1)
The plot involves conflict
77(1)
The Rule of God Initiates the Conflicts
78(4)
Stage 1 The inauguration of the rule of God
80(1)
Stage 2 The culmination of the rule of God
81(1)
Jesus in Conflict with Cosmic Forces
82(2)
Jesus in Conflict with the Authorities
84(6)
The development of the conflict in the plot
85(3)
The authorities' side of the conflict: Defending God's law
88(1)
Jesus' side of the conflict: Message and evasion
89(1)
The resolution of the conflict
89(1)
Jesus in Conflict with the Disciples
90(6)
The development of the conflict in the plot
91(2)
The disciples' side of the conflict: Overwhelmed by the rule of God
93(1)
Jesus' side of the conflict: Making faithful disciples
94(1)
The resolution of the conflict
95(1)
Conclusion
96(3)
Chapter 5 The Characters I: Jesus
99(18)
Approaches to Characterization
100(4)
Characters as types
101(1)
Standards of judgment
102(1)
Comparison and contrast
102(1)
Traits of the characters
103(1)
Identification with characters
103(1)
Summary
104(1)
Jesus
104(13)
Characterization
105(1)
Agent of the rule of God
105(1)
The authority of Jesus
106(2)
Faith
108(1)
Serving and not lording over others
108(2)
Renouncing self, being least, and losing life for others
110(1)
Jesus faces death
111(1)
The execution
112(1)
The meaning of Jesus' crucifixion
113(2)
The empty grave
115(2)
Chapter 6 The Characters II: The Authorities, the Disciples, and the Minor Characters
117(20)
The Authorities
117(6)
Characterization
118(1)
No authority from God
118(1)
No love for God or neighbor
119(1)
Blind and deaf
119(1)
Willful blindness
120(1)
The authorities save themselves
121(1)
Fear is at the root of their actions
121(1)
The authorities lord over people
122(1)
The audience and the authorities
123(1)
The Disciples
123(7)
Characterization
124(1)
Faith, loyalty, and authority
125(1)
Lack of understanding, fear, and lack of faith
125(1)
Seeking glory and resisting death on the journey
126(1)
Fear and flight in Jerusalem
127(1)
The failure of the disciples
128(1)
After the resurrection
129(1)
The audience and the disciples
129(1)
The Minor Characters
130(6)
Characterization
131(1)
Faith
131(1)
Losing life, being least, and serving
132(1)
Women
133(1)
Comparison and contrast with other characters
133(1)
Ongoing discipleship
134(1)
The crowds
134(1)
The audience and the minor characters
135(1)
Conclusion
136(1)
Conclusion: The Audience
137(16)
The Rhetoric
137(1)
The Ideal Audience
138(6)
Stage 1 Experiencing the rule of God
139(1)
Stage 2 Overcoming resistance to the rule of God
140(1)
Stage 3 Facing persecution and execution in Jerusalem
141(1)
The ending
142(2)
Hypothetical First-Century Audiences
144(2)
Case Study: A Performance Scenario
146(6)
The reign of God and the empire of Rome
147(1)
The culture of the rule of God
148(1)
In the aftermath of the Roman-Judean War
148(1)
Opposing the Judean revolutionaries
149(1)
Call to commitment
150(1)
A new world
151(1)
Contemporary Readers
152(1)
Epilogue: Reading as a Dialogue: The Ethics of Reading 153(4)
Afterword 157(6)
Mark Allan Powell
Appendix 1 Exercises for an Overall Narrative Analysis of Mark 163(4)
Appendix 2 Exercises for a Narrative Analysis of Episodes 167(6)
Appendix 3 Exercises for Learning and Telling Episodes 173(6)
Notes 179(10)
Selected Bibliography for the Third Edition 189