Difference between revisions of "Category:Jonah (subject)"

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According to the Jewish tradition (inherited by Christians and Muslims), Jonah was an ancient prophet of Israel.  
According to the Jewish (Christian, and Islamic) traditions, '''Jonah''' was an ancient prophet of Israel.  


==Overview==
==Overview==


==In Depth==
== Jonah in ancient sources ==


*[[Jonah (arts)]]
* See [[Jonah (sources)]] -- survey of ancient sources
 
== Jonah in literature & the arts ==
 
The Christological reinterpretation of the story of Jonah gave to the ancient prophet a prominent status in Christian iconography since the first centuries.
 
====Jonah in popular culture====
 
According to a long-established tradition among sailors, the term "a Jonah" indicates a person (usually, a passenger, not a member of the crew) whose presence on board brings bad luck and endangers the ship. Several fictional works explicitly refer to such a tradition, including the movie ''Captains Courageous'' (1937) by Victor Fleming.
 
"A Jonah" is also a person who has endured suffering and deliverance, like the Jewish child who survived the concentration camp during the Holocaust in the autobiographical novel ''Kinderjaren'' (1978) by Jona Oberski. The story was filmed in 1993 by [[Roberto Faenza]] under the title ''Jona che visse nella balena / Jonah who Lived in the Whale''. 
 
'''Gabriele Boccaccini''', University of Michigan
 
* See [[Jonah (arts)]] -- survey of fictional works
 
== Jonah in scholarship ==
 
*[[Jonah (research)]] -- survey of scholarly works


==External links==
==External links==

Latest revision as of 03:14, 17 July 2012


According to the Jewish (Christian, and Islamic) traditions, Jonah was an ancient prophet of Israel.

Overview

Jonah in ancient sources

Jonah in literature & the arts

The Christological reinterpretation of the story of Jonah gave to the ancient prophet a prominent status in Christian iconography since the first centuries.

Jonah in popular culture

According to a long-established tradition among sailors, the term "a Jonah" indicates a person (usually, a passenger, not a member of the crew) whose presence on board brings bad luck and endangers the ship. Several fictional works explicitly refer to such a tradition, including the movie Captains Courageous (1937) by Victor Fleming.

"A Jonah" is also a person who has endured suffering and deliverance, like the Jewish child who survived the concentration camp during the Holocaust in the autobiographical novel Kinderjaren (1978) by Jona Oberski. The story was filmed in 1993 by Roberto Faenza under the title Jona che visse nella balena / Jonah who Lived in the Whale.

Gabriele Boccaccini, University of Michigan

Jonah in scholarship

External links

Pages in category "Jonah (subject)"

The following 29 pages are in this category, out of 29 total.