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Contribution to Book
"This Song" Conspicuous Poetry in Hebrew Prose
Religion - All Scholarship
  • James W. Watts, Syracuse University
ORCID

James W. Watts: 0000-0002-4872-4986

Document Type
Book Chapter
Date
1-1-1993
Keywords
  • Hebrew,
  • prose,
  • Bible,
  • inset poetry,
  • Judaism
Language
English
Disciplines
Description/Abstract

The Hebrew Bible contains many passages in which prose narrative surrounds conspicuous poetry. The various theoretical and practical difficulties in distinguishing Hebrew prose from verse in other texts do not negate this observation. Explicit genre labels often appear in both the prose frameworks and the beginnings of poems, telling readers that the genre and mode have changed. The interpretive problem then becomes, not whether this is verse, but why poetry appears precisely here. What does poetic expression accomplish that Hebrew prose narrative cannot or will not do?

Comparative study of conspicuous inset poetry suggests that Hebrew narratives use it to achieve certain distinguishable effects. The placement of poetry within prose became an established convention of Hebrew narrative, and the broad lines of this convention's development can be discerned in the history of First and Second Temple Jewish literature. Beginning with the explicit markers of poetic genres, I will survey the voicing, narrative roles, and history of Hebrew inset poetry.

Additional Information
From the book "Verse in Ancient Near Eastern Prose."
Source
local input
Citation Information
Watts, James W. "'This Song' Conspicuous Poetry in Hebrew Prose." Verse in Ancient Near Eastern Prose. Ed. Johannes C. de Moor, Wilfred G. Watson, AOAT 42. Neukirchen-Vluyn: Neukirchen Verlag, 1993. 345-58.