1 Enoch 91-108 (2007 Stuckenbruck), book
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1 Enoch 91-108 (2007) is a book by Loren T. Stuckenbruck.
Abstract
An English translation of the Epistle of Enoch, with notes and commentary. Includes Exhortation, Epistle of Enoch, Apocalypse of Weeks, Birth of Noah, and Eschatological Admonition (1 Enoch 91-108). Knows 49 mss., of which 12 are Eth. 1, and makes text-critical use of them with fresh readings; for Eth. II mss. depends on Charles and Knibb’s editions.
"The volume is a commentary on 1 Enoch chapters 91-108 that begins with the Ethiopic text tradition but also takes the Greek and Aramaic (Dead Sea Scrolls) evidence into account. This section of 1 Enoch, which contains material from at least five different documents composed some time during the 2nd century BCE, provides a window into the early stages of the reception of the earliest Enoch tradition, as it was being negotiated in relation to elitist religious opponents, on the one hand, and in relation to other Jewish traditions that were flourishing at the time."--Publisher description.
Editions
Published in Berlin [Germany]: Walter de Gruyter, 2007 (Commentaries on Early Jewish Literature).
Table of contents
Chapter One - Introduction
- A. Overview
- B. 1 Enoch 91-108 and Stages of Literary Growth
- C. 1 Enoch 91-108: The Ethiopic Version
- D. Bibliography
Chapter Two - Part One: Apocalypse of Weeks (1 Enoch 93:1-10; 91:11-17)
- Introduction
- A. The Text Traditions
- B. Division of Time
- C. Outline and Content
- D. Date
- E. Authorship and Relation to the Epistle and Exhortation
- Commentary
Chapter Three - Part Two: Exhortation (1 Enoch 91:1-10, 18-19)
- Introduction
- A. The Text Traditions
- B. Literary Analysis
- C. The Exhortation as an Independent Tradition
- D. Date
- Commentary
Chapter Four - Part Three: Epistle of Enoch (1 Enoch 92:1-5; 93:11-14; 94:1-105:2) Introduction
- A. The Text Traditions
- B. Introduction to the Epistle (Title, Outline, Literary Analysis of Formulae, and Use of Tradition)
- C. Date and Social Setting
- D. Author and Community
- Commentary
Chapter Five - Part Four: Birth of Noah (1 Enoch 106:1-107:3)
- Introduction
- A. The Enochic Character of Chapters 106-107
- B. Summary and Significance
- C. Birth of Noah in the Context of Enochic and Other Early Jewish Traditions
- D. The Text Traditions
- E. Date
- Commentary
Chapter Six - Part Five: Eschatological Admonition (1 Enoch 108:1-15) *Introduction
- A. Summary
- B. Structure
- C. The Text Traditions
- D. Eschatological Admonition in Relation to Enochic and Other Early Jewish Traditions
- E. Date
- Commentary
External links
- 2007
- Scholarship
- Books
- American Scholarship
- German Scholarship
- English language
- Made in the 2000s
- Enochic Studies
- Enochic Studies--Scholarship
- Enochic Studies--German Scholarship
- Enochic Studies--American Scholarship
- Enochic Studies--English language
- OT Pseudepigrapha Studies
- OT Pseudepigrapha Studies--Scholarship
- OT Pseudepigrapha Studies--German Scholarship
- OT Pseudepigrapha Studies--American Scholarship
- OT Pseudepigrapha Studies--English language
- Apocalyptic Studies
- Apocalyptic Studies--Scholarship
- Apocalyptic Studies--German Scholarship
- Apocalyptic Studies--American Scholarship
- Apocalyptic Studies--English language
- 1 Enoch (text)
- 1 Enoch--Translations (text)
- 1 Enoch--English tr. (text)
- Epistle of Enoch (text)
- Epistle of Enoch--English tr. (text)